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When was the last time ghana won afcon? | 6132880966042845727 | Ghana national football team | [
"1982"
] | [
"Africa Women Cup of Nations",
"Africa Cup of Nations",
"Ghana national football team"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"1982"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When was the last time ghana won afcon?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Ghana</b> national football team represents <b>Ghana</b> in men's international \nfootball and has ... Although the team qualified for the senior FIFA World Cup for \nthe first <b>time</b> in 2006, they had ... After going through 2005 unbeaten, the <b>Ghana</b> \nnational football team <b>won</b> the FIFA Best ... 8 July 2019 2019 <b>AFCON</b>, <b>Ghana</b>, 1–\n1 (a.e.t.)",
"title": "Ghana national football team"
},
{
"snippet": "The CAF Africa Cup of Nations, officially CAN also referred to as <b>AFCON</b>, or Total \nAfrica Cup of ... <b>final</b>. The match ended in a 1–1 draw after 120 minutes and \n<b>Ghana won</b> the penalty shootout to become champions. ... Following a 2–2 draw \nafter extra <b>time</b> in the <b>final</b>, Cameroon defeated Nigeria on penalty kicks. In 2002\n ...",
"title": "Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of records and statistics of clubs and players who have taken part in \nthe Africa Cup ... 8 Debut of teams in qualification; 9 Debut of teams in <b>final</b> \ntournament ... 4 <b>times</b>, <b>Ghana</b>, 1963, 1978, 2000*, 2008 ... Egypt is the only team \nto have <b>won</b> three consecutive finals of Africa Cup of Nations (2006; 2008; and \n2010).",
"title": "Africa Cup of Nations records and statistics"
},
{
"snippet": "Just before half-<b>time</b>, <b>Ghana</b> took the lead when Sulley ... <b>Ghana</b> was the <b>last</b> \nAfrican team left in the tournament and if they had <b>won</b>, they would have been the \nfirst team from ...",
"title": "Ghana at the FIFA World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "after extra <b>time</b>. Ivory Coast <b>won</b> 9–8 on penalties. Date, 8 February 2015 (2015-\n02-08). Venue, Estadio de Bata, Bata · Referee · Bakary Gassama (Gambia). \nAttendance, 32,857. ← 2013 · 2017 →. The 2015 Africa Cup of Nations <b>Final</b> was \na football match that took place on 8 February 2015 ... <b>Ghana</b> also appeared in \ntheir 20th tournament, and their 9th <b>final</b>.",
"title": "2015 Africa Cup of Nations Final"
},
{
"snippet": "Top scorer(s), <b>Ghana</b> George Alhassan (4 goals). Best player(s), Libya Fawzi Al-\nIssawi. ← 1980 · 1984 →. The 1982 Africa Cup of Nations was the 13th edition of \nthe Africa Cup of Nations, the ... <b>Ghana won</b> its fourth championship, beating \nLibya on penalty kicks 7−6 after a ... 5.1 Semifinals; 5.2 Third place match; 5.3 \n<b>Final</b>.",
"title": "1982 Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "All-<b>time</b> series, <b>Ghana</b>: 25. Draw: 19. Nigeria: 12. Largest victory, <b>Ghana</b> 7–0 \nNigeria Jalco Cup (1 June 1955). The <b>Ghana</b>–Nigeria football rivalry is a sports \nrivalry that exists between the national football ... <b>Ghana won</b> or retained the cup \nin every year that it was contested, continuing a dominance in the rivalry \nstemming in ...",
"title": "Ghana–Nigeria football rivalry"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Ghana</b> national U-20 football team known as the Black Satellites, is considered to \nbe the feeder team for the <b>Ghana</b> national football team. They are the former FIFA \nU-20 World Cup Champions and African Youth Champions, they have also been \na three-<b>time</b> African Champion in 1995, 1999, 2009 and ... The first <b>time</b> an \nAfrican country <b>won</b> the FIFA U-20 World Cup Championship ...",
"title": "Ghana national under-20 football team"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Ghana</b> national U-17 football team known as the Black Starlets, is the \nyoungest team that represents <b>Ghana</b> in football. They are two-<b>time</b> FIFA U-17 \nWorld Cup Champions in 1991 and 1995 and a ... They have also <b>won</b> the Africa \nU-17 Cup of Nations two <b>times</b> in 1995 and 1999 and were Runners-up in 2005 \nand 2017 ...",
"title": "Ghana national under-17 football team"
},
{
"snippet": "André Morgan Rami Ayew also known as Dede Ayew in <b>Ghana</b>, is a <b>Ghanaian</b> \nprofessional footballer who plays as a winger for Championship club Swansea \nCity and captains the <b>Ghana</b> national team. He is the second-born son of three-\n<b>time</b> African Footballer of the Year and ... <b>Ghana</b> later <b>won</b> the match in extra <b>time</b> \nthrough a goal from Dominic Adiyiah.",
"title": "André Ayew"
}
]
},
{
"query": "women's afcon",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The Total Africa <b>Women</b> Cup of Nations is an international <b>women's</b> football \ncompetition held every two years and sanctioned by the Confederation of African\n ...",
"title": "Africa Women Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2018 Africa Women Cup of Nations, officially known as the Total Women's \nAfrica Cup Of ... 28 September 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2017. ^ "GFA \nreceives official mandate to host 2018 <b>Women AFCON</b>". ghanafa.org. 12 \nDecember 2016.",
"title": "2018 Africa Women Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2020 Africa <b>Women</b> Cup of Nations, officially known as the Total <b>Women's</b> \nAfrica Cup Of Nations, will be the 12th edition of the Africa <b>Women</b> Cup of ...",
"title": "2020 Africa Women Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2016 <b>Women</b> Africa Cup of Nations was the 12th edition of the Africa <b>Women</b> \nCup of ... 2016 Afcon Women (logo).png. Tournament details. Host country, \nCameroon. Dates, 19 November – 3 December 2016. Teams, 8 (from 1 \nconfederation).",
"title": "2016 Africa Women Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The African U-20 Cup of Nations for <b>Women</b> is association football tournament for \nthe under 20 teams, that is held every two years, and serves as a qualifying ...",
"title": "African U-20 Cup of Nations for Women"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2018 Africa Women Cup of Nations qualification was a women's football \ncompetition which ... "Nigeria draw bye in 2018 <b>Women's AFCON</b> qualifiers". \nbusybuddiesng.com. 4 October 2017. Retrieved 12 October 2017. ^ "Equatorial \nGuinea ...",
"title": "2018 Africa Women Cup of Nations qualification"
},
{
"snippet": "The African U-17 Cup of Nations for <b>Women</b> is association football tournament for \nthe under 17 teams, that is held every two years, and serves as a qualifying ...",
"title": "African U-17 Cup of Nations for Women"
},
{
"snippet": "The Nigeria national <b>women's</b> football team, nicknamed the Super Falcons \nrepresents Nigeria in international <b>women's</b> football and is controlled by the \nNigeria ...",
"title": "Nigeria women's national football team"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2020 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament is the 7th \nedition of the ... Jump up to: "CAF draws lots for the Total <b>Women AFCON</b> 2020 \nand preliminaries for FIFA U-17 & U-20 Women's World Cup 2020". CAF. 4 \nDecember ...",
"title": "2020 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The 2020 CAF <b>Women's</b> Olympic Qualifying Tournament is the 5th edition of the \nCAF <b>Women's</b> Olympic Qualifying Tournament, the quadrennial international ...",
"title": "2020 CAF Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament"
}
]
},
{
"query": "afcon",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The 2019 Africa Cup of Nations known as the Total 2019 Africa Cup of Nations \nfor sponsorship ... The organizing board of the 2019 African Cup of Nations \nrevealed the <b>AFCON</b> 2019 Mascot; "Tut", which was inspired by the Egyptian \nPharaoh ...",
"title": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The CAF Africa Cup of Nations, officially CAN also referred to as <b>AFCON</b>, or Total \nAfrica Cup of Nations after its headline sponsor, is the main international men's ...",
"title": "Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2017 Africa Cup of Nations, known as the Total Africa Cup of Nations, Gabon \n2017 was the ... The Guardian. Reuters. 8 April 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2017. \n^ "<b>Afcon</b> 2017: Cameroon's Aboubakar wins final with late goal against Egypt".",
"title": "2017 Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2015 Africa Cup of Nations, known as the Orange Africa Cup of Nations, \nEquatorial Guinea ... On 6 February 2015, CAF announced that Morocco had \nbeen banned from the next two <b>AFCON</b> tournaments, fined 1 million US dollars, \nas well ...",
"title": "2015 Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2013 Africa Cup of Nations, also known as the Orange Africa Cup of Nations \nSouth Africa ... Afrika-nasiesbeker 2013; Afrika Inkomishi ave Isizwe 2013; \nAFCON 2013; CAN 2013. 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.png. Tournament logo.",
"title": "2013 Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2021 Africa Cup of Nations is scheduled to be the 33rd edition of the Africa \nCup of Nations, ... CAF announced the hosts for the 2019, 2021 and 2023 \n<b>AFCON</b> tournaments: 2019 to Cameroon, 2021 to Ivory Coast, and 2023 to \nGuinea.",
"title": "2021 Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification matches were organized by the \nConfederation of ... "Revised dates for Total <b>AFCON</b> Cameroon 2019 qualifiers".",
"title": "2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualification"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2012 Africa Cup of Nations, also known as the Orange Africa Cup of Nations \nfor ... Copa Africana de Naciones 2012; Campeonato Africano das Nações de \n2012; Coupe d'Afrique des Nations 2012; AFCON 2012; CAN 2012. 2012 Africa ...",
"title": "2012 Africa Cup of Nations"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualification matches were organized by the \nConfederation of ... 2017 Afcon Qualification (logo).png. Tournament details.",
"title": "2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualification"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2023 Africa Cup of Nations is scheduled to be the 34th edition of the Africa \nCup of Nations, ... CAF announced the hosts for the 2019, 2021 and 2023 \n<b>AFCON</b> tournaments: 2019 to Cameroon, 2021 to Ivory Coast, and 2023 to \nGuinea.",
"title": "2023 Africa Cup of Nations"
}
]
}
] |
Who won the smackdown tag team champions at money in the bank? | 6207890877132628045 | Money in the Bank (2018) | [
"The Bludgeon Brothers"
] | [
"Money in the Bank (2016)",
"Money in the Bank (2018)",
"List of WWE SmackDown Tag Team Champions",
"Money in the Bank (2019)",
"Money in the Bank (2017)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"The New Day"
],
"question": "Who won the wwe smackdown tag team championship at money in the bank in 2017?"
},
{
"answer": [
"The Bludgeon Brothers"
],
"question": "Who won the wwe smackdown tag team championship at money in the bank in 2018?|Who won the smackdown tag team championship at money in the bank for 2018?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "smackdown tag team champs money in the bank 2018",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>2018</b>, Next → —. <b>Money in the Bank</b> (2019) was a professional wrestling pay-per\n-view (PPV) and WWE Network ... After losing the <b>SmackDown Tag Team</b> \n<b>Championship</b> to The Hardy Boyz (Jeff Hardy and Matt Hardy), The Usos (Jey \nUso and ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2019)"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nworld tag team ... Barnett, Jake (October 16, <b>2018</b>). ... being attacked by Kevin \nOwens, the announcement of the Smackdown <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match \nparticipants". ... Big E and Kofi Kingston for the Smackdown Tag <b>Titles</b>, Sasha \nBanks vs.",
"title": "List of WWE SmackDown Tag Team Champions"
},
{
"snippet": "On May 14, SmackDown commissioner Shane McMahon ... the WWE \n<b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> at <b>Money in the Bank</b>.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2018)"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE Women's <b>Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nwomen's <b>tag team championship</b> created and promoted by the American \npromotion WWE. It is the only women's <b>tag team championship</b> in the promotion. \nAs such, it is defended across WWE's three major brands, Raw, <b>SmackDown</b>, ... \nThe <b>championship</b> was established on the December 24, <b>2018</b>, episode of ...",
"title": "WWE Women's Tag Team Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "The Usos are an American professional wrestling tag team composed of twin \nbrothers Joshua ... In 2017, they became <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champions</b> on \nthree different occasions, with number four ... At <b>Money in the Bank</b> The Usos \nchallenged Rollins and Reigns for the <b>titles</b>, but were ... Tag Team of the Year (\n<b>2018</b>).",
"title": "The Usos"
},
{
"snippet": "Alexis Kaufman (born August 9, 1991) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently signed to ... She won the <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match in <b>2018</b> and \ncashed in the ... In 2019, Bliss and Nikki Cross would win the WWE Women's <b>Tag</b> \n<b>Team Championship</b>, making Bliss the second Women's Triple Crown <b>Champion</b>\n.",
"title": "Alexa Bliss"
},
{
"snippet": "Previous 2016, Next → <b>2018</b>. <b>Money in the Bank</b> (2017) was a professional \nwrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event and WWE ... Next, The Usos defended the \n<b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> against The New Day's Big E and Kofi \nKingston.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2017)"
},
{
"snippet": "Bryan Lloyd Danielson (born May 22, 1981) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently ... He was also the 2011 <b>SmackDown Money in the Bank</b> winner, the \n2013 ... In March <b>2018</b>, Bryan was formally cleared by doctors and returned to in-\nring ... He won the TWA <b>Tag Team Championship</b> with Spanky in March 2000, \nbut ...",
"title": "Daniel Bryan"
},
{
"snippet": "Kofi Nahaje Sarkodie-Mensah (born August 14, 1981) is a Ghanaian-American \nprofessional wrestler currently signed to WWE under the ring name Kofi Kingston \nwhere he performs on the SmackDown brand. He is currently in his fourth reign \nas <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champion</b> as a ... On July 18 at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, \nKingston lost the SmackDown <b>Money in the</b> ...",
"title": "Kofi Kingston"
},
{
"snippet": "On the November 16 episode of <b>SmackDown</b>!, The Miz became one half of the \nWWE <b>Tag Team Champions</b> with John Morrison when they defeated Matt Hardy\n ...",
"title": "The Miz"
}
]
},
{
"query": "smackdown tag team champs money in the bank 2019",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (<b>2019</b>) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) and \nWWE Network ... After losing the <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> to The \nHardy Boyz (Jeff Hardy and Matt Hardy), The Usos (Jey Uso and Jimmy Uso) \nwere ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2019)"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nworld tag team ... E. They defeated The Revival (Scott Dawson and Dash Wilder) \non the November 8, <b>2019</b> episode of Friday Night SmackDown in Manchester, \nEngland. ... Big E and Kofi Kingston for the Smackdown Tag <b>Titles</b>, Sasha <b>Banks</b> \nvs.",
"title": "List of WWE SmackDown Tag Team Champions"
},
{
"snippet": "The Usos are an American professional wrestling tag team composed of twin \nbrothers Joshua ... In 2017, they became <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champions</b> on \nthree different occasions, ... At <b>Money in the Bank</b> The Usos challenged Rollins \nand Reigns for the <b>titles</b>, but ... <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champions</b> (2016–<b>2019</b>)[\nedit].",
"title": "The Usos"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE Women's <b>Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nwomen's <b>tag team championship</b> created and promoted by the American \npromotion WWE. It is the only women's <b>tag team championship</b> in the promotion. \nAs such, it is defended across WWE's three major brands, Raw, <b>SmackDown</b>, ... \nOn the January 14, <b>2019</b>, episode of Raw, the <b>championship</b> belts were ...",
"title": "WWE Women's Tag Team Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "Kofi Nahaje Sarkodie-Mensah (born August 14, 1981) is a Ghanaian-American \nprofessional wrestler currently signed to WWE under the ring name Kofi Kingston \nwhere he performs on the SmackDown brand. He is currently in his fourth reign \nas <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champion</b> as a ... On July 18 at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, \nKingston lost the SmackDown <b>Money in the</b> ...",
"title": "Kofi Kingston"
},
{
"snippet": "The New Day is a professional wrestling stable in WWE, consisting of Big E, Kofi \nKingston, and ... As <b>tag team champions</b>, The New Day generally defend the <b>titles</b> \nunder the Freebird rule, with all ... They lost the <b>championship</b> to The Prime Time \nPlayers the following month at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, but won it back in August at ...",
"title": "The New Day (professional wrestling)"
},
{
"snippet": "Bryan Lloyd Danielson (born May 22, 1981) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently ... He was also the 2011 <b>SmackDown Money in the Bank</b> winner, the \n2013 ... He won the TWA <b>Tag Team Championship</b> with Spanky in March 2000, \nbut ... At the Royal Rumble on January 27, <b>2019</b>, Bryan successfully retained his \ntitle ...",
"title": "Daniel Bryan"
},
{
"snippet": "On the November 16 episode of <b>SmackDown</b>!, The Miz became one half of the \nWWE <b>Tag Team Champions</b> with John Morrison when they defeated Matt Hardy\n ...",
"title": "The Miz"
},
{
"snippet": "Alexis Kaufman (born August 9, 1991) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently signed to ... In <b>2019</b>, Bliss and Nikki Cross would win the WWE \nWomen's <b>Tag Team Championship</b>, making Bliss the ... The following week on \nNXT, she defeated NXT Women's <b>Champion</b> Sasha <b>Banks</b> by countout in a non-\ntitle match, ...",
"title": "Alexa Bliss"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2018) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view event and \nWWE Network ... and Erick Rowan) for the WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team</b> \n<b>Championship</b> at <b>Money in the Bank</b>. ... Archived from the original on May 14, \n<b>2019</b>.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2018)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "smackdown tag team champs money in the bank 2017",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (<b>2017</b>) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event \nand WWE ... Next, The Usos defended the <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> \nagainst The New Day's Big E and Kofi Kingston. In the end, Big E and Kingston ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2017)"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nworld tag team ... "Powell's WWE Hell in a Cell <b>2017</b> live review: Kevin Owens vs. \n... by Kevin Owens, the announcement of the Smackdown <b>Money in the Bank</b> \nladder match ... Big E and Kofi Kingston for the Smackdown Tag <b>Titles</b>, Sasha \nBanks vs.",
"title": "List of WWE SmackDown Tag Team Champions"
},
{
"snippet": "The Usos are an American professional wrestling tag team composed of twin \nbrothers Joshua ... In <b>2017</b>, they became <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champions</b> on \nthree different occasions, with number four coming in 2019. ... At <b>Money in the</b> \n<b>Bank</b> The Usos challenged Rollins and Reigns for the <b>titles</b>, but were \nunsuccessful and ...",
"title": "The Usos"
},
{
"snippet": "The New Day is a professional wrestling stable in WWE, consisting of Big E, Kofi \nKingston, and ... As tag team <b>champions</b>, The New Day generally defend the <b>titles</b> \nunder the Freebird rule, with all ... After being drafted to SmackDown in April \n<b>2017</b>, the stable went on to capture the <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> on \na ...",
"title": "The New Day (professional wrestling)"
},
{
"snippet": "Alexis Kaufman (born August 9, 1991) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently signed to ... She won the <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match in 2018 and \ncashed in the contract later ... Overall, Bliss has won six <b>championships</b> in WWE. \n... <b>SmackDown</b> Women's elimination <b>tag team</b> match at Survivor Series on \nNovember ...",
"title": "Alexa Bliss"
},
{
"snippet": "Battleground (<b>2017</b>) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event and \nWWE Network ... At <b>Money in the Bank</b>, Jinder Mahal defeated Randy Orton to \nretain the WWE <b>Championship</b>. ... Xavier Woods) defeated <b>SmackDown Tag</b> \n<b>Team Champions</b> The Usos (Jey and Jimmy Uso) by count-out, thus The Usos \nretained.",
"title": "Battleground (2017)"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael Gregory Mizanin (born October 8, 1980) is an American professional \nwrestler, actor and media personality. He is currently signed to WWE, where he \nperforms on the <b>SmackDown</b> brand ... The Miz in December 2017 ... The Miz also \nwon the 2010 Raw <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match, and was ranked number \none on ...",
"title": "The Miz"
},
{
"snippet": "He was also the 2016 <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match winner. Upon winning the \nRaw <b>Tag Team Championship</b> in August <b>2017</b>, Ambrose became WWE's 27th ...",
"title": "Jon Moxley"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match is a multi-person ladder match held by the \nprofessional ... The <b>2017</b> event also included the first-ever women's <b>Money in the</b> \n<b>Bank</b> ... 14 episode of <b>SmackDown</b>, John Morrison defeated his <b>tag team</b> partner \nThe ... "Raw Results – 2/26/07 – Fresno, CA (Trump makes pick & '<b>Tag Titles</b>')".",
"title": "Money in the Bank ladder match"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>2017</b>, Next → 2019. <b>Money in the Bank</b> (2018) was a professional wrestling pay-\nper-view event and WWE Network ... Brothers (Luke Harper and Erick Rowan) for \nthe WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> at <b>Money in the Bank</b>.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2018)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "money in the bank",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2019) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) and \nWWE Network event, produced by WWE for their Raw, SmackDown, and 205 ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2019)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> is a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event, \nproduced annually by WWE. It is named after the <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder \nmatch, ...",
"title": "WWE Money in the Bank"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match is a multi-person ladder match held by the \nprofessional wrestling promotion WWE. First contested at WWE's annual ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank ladder match"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2014) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event \nand WWE Network event produced by WWE. It took place on June 29, 2014 at ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2014)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2018) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view event and \nWWE Network event, held by WWE for their Raw and SmackDown brands.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2018)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2011) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view event held \nby WWE, and the second installment in the annual <b>Money in the Bank</b> series of ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2011)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2016) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event \nand WWE Network event produced by WWE. It took place on June 19, 2016 at ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2016)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2017) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event \nand WWE Network event produced by WWE for the SmackDown brand.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2017)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2012) was the seventh of twelve professional wrestling pay-\nper-view (PPV) event produced by WWE that year, and the third installment in ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2012)"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>Money in the Bank</b>" is a hip hop single from Lil Scrappy's debut album Bred 2 \nDie Born 2 Live, featuring Young Buck. The video has cameo appearances ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (Lil Scrappy song)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "smackdown tag team champs money in the bank",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2019) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) and \nWWE Network ... After losing the <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> to The \nHardy Boyz (Jeff Hardy and Matt Hardy), The Usos (Jey Uso and Jimmy Uso) \nwere ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2019)"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nworld tag team ... Bayley in a non-title match, Kofi Kingston addresses being \nattacked by Kevin Owens, the announcement of the Smackdown <b>Money in the</b> \n<b>Bank</b> ladder ... Big E and Kofi Kingston for the Smackdown Tag <b>Titles</b>, Sasha \nBanks vs.",
"title": "List of WWE SmackDown Tag Team Champions"
},
{
"snippet": "The Usos are an American professional wrestling tag team composed of twin \nbrothers Joshua ... In 2017, they became <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champions</b> on \nthree different occasions, with number four coming in 2019. ... At <b>Money in the</b> \n<b>Bank</b> The Usos challenged Rollins and Reigns for the <b>titles</b>, but were \nunsuccessful and ...",
"title": "The Usos"
},
{
"snippet": "Kofi Nahaje Sarkodie-Mensah (born August 14, 1981) is a Ghanaian-American \nprofessional wrestler currently signed to WWE under the ring name Kofi Kingston \nwhere he performs on the SmackDown brand. He is currently in his fourth reign \nas <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champion</b> as a ... On July 18 at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, \nKingston lost the SmackDown <b>Money in the</b> ...",
"title": "Kofi Kingston"
},
{
"snippet": "The New Day is a professional wrestling stable in WWE, consisting of Big E, Kofi \nKingston, and ... As <b>tag team champions</b>, The New Day generally defend the <b>titles</b> \nunder the Freebird rule, with all ... They lost the <b>championship</b> to The Prime Time \nPlayers the following month at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, but won it back in August at ...",
"title": "The New Day (professional wrestling)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2017) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event \nand WWE ... Next, The Usos defended the <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> \nagainst The New Day's Big E and Kofi Kingston. In the end, Big E and Kingston ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2017)"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE Women's <b>Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nwomen's <b>tag team championship</b> created and promoted by the American \npromotion WWE. It is the only women's <b>tag team championship</b> in the promotion. \nAs such, it is defended across WWE's three major brands, Raw, <b>SmackDown</b>, ... \nThe Boss 'n' Hug Connection (Bayley and Sasha <b>Banks</b>) were the inaugural ...",
"title": "WWE Women's Tag Team Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "Bryan Lloyd Danielson (born May 22, 1981) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently ... He was also the 2011 <b>SmackDown Money in the Bank</b> winner, the \n2013 ... He won the TWA <b>Tag Team Championship</b> with Spanky in March 2000, \nbut they dropped the <b>titles</b> back to Jeremy Sage and Ruben Cruz two weeks later.",
"title": "Daniel Bryan"
},
{
"snippet": "On May 14, SmackDown commissioner Shane McMahon ... the WWE \n<b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> at <b>Money in the Bank</b>.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2018)"
},
{
"snippet": "On the November 16 episode of <b>SmackDown</b>!, The Miz became one half of the \nWWE <b>Tag Team Champions</b> with John Morrison when they defeated Matt Hardy\n ...",
"title": "The Miz"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who won the smackdown tag team champions at money in the bank?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2019) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) and \nWWE Network ... In the main event, unannounced entrant Brock Lesnar <b>won</b> the \nmen's <b>Money in the Bank</b> ladder match. ... After losing the <b>SmackDown Tag Team</b> \n<b>Championship</b> to The Hardy Boyz (Jeff Hardy and Matt Hardy), The Usos (Jey ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2019)"
},
{
"snippet": "The WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nworld tag team ... The inaugural champions were Heath Slater and Rhyno, <b>who</b> \n<b>won</b> the title in a tournament final at Backlash on September 11, 2016. The New \nDay's Big E ... Big E and Kofi Kingston for the <b>Smackdown Tag Titles</b>, Sasha \n<b>Banks</b> vs.",
"title": "List of WWE SmackDown Tag Team Champions"
},
{
"snippet": "The Usos are an American professional wrestling tag team composed of twin \nbrothers Joshua ... In 2017, they became <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champions</b> on \nthree different occasions, with number four coming in 2019. ... At <b>Money in the</b> \n<b>Bank</b> The Usos challenged Rollins and Reigns for the titles, but were \nunsuccessful and ...",
"title": "The Usos"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (2017) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event \nand WWE ... The card included seven matches, including <b>one</b> on the Kickoff pre-\nshow, that resulted from scripted ... Next, The Usos defended the <b>SmackDown</b> \n<b>Tag Team Championship</b> against The New Day's Big E and Kofi Kingston. In the\n ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2017)"
},
{
"snippet": "The following week, Becky Lynch <b>won</b> against Mandy Rose and ... <b>SmackDown</b> \n<b>Tag Team Championship at Money in the Bank</b>.",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2018)"
},
{
"snippet": "Kofi Nahaje Sarkodie-Mensah (born August 14, 1981) is a Ghanaian-American \nprofessional wrestler currently signed to WWE under the ring name Kofi Kingston \nwhere he performs on the SmackDown brand. He is currently in his fourth reign \nas <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champion</b> as a ... However, they lost the <b>titles at</b> \n<b>Money in the Bank</b> against The Prime Time ...",
"title": "Kofi Kingston"
},
{
"snippet": "Bryan Lloyd Danielson (born May 22, 1981) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently ... He was also the 2011 <b>SmackDown Money in the Bank winner</b>, the \n2013 ... He <b>won</b> the TWA <b>Tag Team Championship</b> with Spanky in March 2000, \nbut they dropped the <b>titles</b> back to Jeremy Sage and Ruben Cruz two weeks later.",
"title": "Daniel Bryan"
},
{
"snippet": "The New Day is a professional wrestling stable in WWE, consisting of Big E, Kofi \nKingston, and ... As <b>tag team champions</b>, The New Day generally defend the <b>titles</b> \nunder the Freebird rule, with all ... They lost the <b>championship</b> to The Prime Time \nPlayers the following month at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, but <b>won</b> it back in August at ...",
"title": "The New Day (professional wrestling)"
},
{
"snippet": "Colby Lopez (born May 28, 1986) is an American professional wrestler currently \nsigned to WWE, where he performs on the Raw brand under the ring name Seth \nRollins, and is the currently <b>one</b>-half of the WWE Raw <b>Tag Team Champions</b> with \nBuddy Murphy ... At <b>Money in the Bank</b> on June 19, Rollins defeated Reigns <b>to</b> \n<b>win</b> his second ...",
"title": "Seth Rollins"
},
{
"snippet": "On the November 16 episode of <b>SmackDown</b>!, The Miz became <b>one</b> half of the \nWWE <b>Tag Team Champions</b> with John Morrison when they defeated Matt Hardy\n ...",
"title": "The Miz"
}
]
},
{
"query": "smackdown tag team champs money in the bank 2016",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The WWE <b>SmackDown Tag Team Championship</b> is a professional wrestling \nworld tag team <b>championship</b> contested in WWE on the SmackDown brand. \nUnveiled on the August 23, <b>2016</b> episode of SmackDown Live, it was created ... \nBig E and Kofi Kingston for the Smackdown Tag <b>Titles</b>, Sasha <b>Banks</b> vs. Nikki \nCross, Tyson ...",
"title": "List of WWE SmackDown Tag Team Champions"
},
{
"snippet": "The Usos are an American professional wrestling tag team composed of twin \nbrothers Joshua ... In 2017, they became <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champions</b> on \nthree different ... They performed this entrance until they turned heel in <b>2016</b>. ... At \n<b>Money in the Bank</b> The Usos challenged Rollins and Reigns for the <b>titles</b>, but \nwere ...",
"title": "The Usos"
},
{
"snippet": "The New Day is a professional wrestling stable in WWE, consisting of Big E, Kofi \nKingston, and ... As <b>tag team champions</b>, The New Day generally defend the <b>titles</b> \nunder the ... to The Prime Time Players the following month at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, \nbut won it ... <b>Tag Team</b> of the Year (2015, <b>2016</b>); Ranked Kofi Kingston No.",
"title": "The New Day (professional wrestling)"
},
{
"snippet": "Kofi Nahaje Sarkodie-Mensah (born August 14, 1981) is a Ghanaian-American \nprofessional wrestler currently signed to WWE under the ring name Kofi Kingston \nwhere he performs on the SmackDown brand. He is currently in his fourth reign \nas <b>SmackDown Tag Team Champion</b> as a ... On July 18 at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, \nKingston lost the SmackDown <b>Money in the</b> ...",
"title": "Kofi Kingston"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Money in the Bank</b> (<b>2016</b>) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event \nand WWE ... Subsequently, the Vaudevillains challenged WWE <b>Tag Team</b> \n<b>Champions</b> The New Day at Extreme Rules in a losing effort. ... On the May 26 \nepisode of <b>SmackDown</b>, after WWE United States <b>Champion</b> Rusev defeated \nKalisto to ...",
"title": "Money in the Bank (2016)"
},
{
"snippet": "Bryan Lloyd Danielson (born May 22, 1981) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently ... He was also the 2011 <b>SmackDown Money in the Bank</b> winner, the \n2013 ... In February <b>2016</b>, Danielson retired from professional wrestling due to \nmedical ... He won the TWA <b>Tag Team Championship</b> with Spanky in March 2000\n, but ...",
"title": "Daniel Bryan"
},
{
"snippet": "On the November 16 episode of <b>SmackDown</b>!, The Miz became one half of the \nWWE <b>Tag Team Champions</b> with John Morrison when they defeated Matt Hardy\n ...",
"title": "The Miz"
},
{
"snippet": "He was also the <b>2016 Money in the Bank</b> ladder match winner. Upon winning the \nRaw <b>Tag Team Championship</b> in August 2017, Ambrose became WWE's 27th ...",
"title": "Jon Moxley"
},
{
"snippet": "Alexis Kaufman (born August 9, 1991) is an American professional wrestler \ncurrently signed to ... Bliss made her main <b>roster</b> debut on the <b>SmackDown</b> brand \nin July <b>2016</b>, ... In 2019, Bliss and Nikki Cross would win the WWE Women's <b>Tag</b> \n<b>Team Championship</b>, making Bliss the second Women's Triple Crown <b>Champion</b>\n.",
"title": "Alexa Bliss"
},
{
"snippet": "Stephen Farrelly (born 28 January 1978) is an Irish professional wrestler and \nactor. ... He also represented the UK in a Battle of the Nations <b>tag team</b> match ... \nHe brought the United States <b>Championship</b> to <b>SmackDown</b>, but lost it back to \nthe ... at <b>Money in the Bank</b>, Sheamus competed in the WWE <b>Championship</b> \n<b>Money in</b> ...",
"title": "Sheamus"
}
]
}
] |
What was the first major battle of the civil war to be fought on union soil? | 6302408864264805884 | Battle of Antietam | [
"The Battle of Antietam"
] | [
"Battle of Antietam"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"The Battle of Antietam",
"Battle of Sharpsburg"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "What was the first major battle of the civil war to be fought on union soil?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Antietam /ænˈtiːtəm/, also known as the <b>Battle</b> of Sharpsburg, \nparticularly in the Southern United States, was a <b>battle</b> of the American <b>Civil War</b>, \n<b>fought</b> on September 17, 1862, ... it was the <b>first</b> field army–level engagement in \nthe Eastern Theater of the American <b>Civil War</b> to take place on <b>Union soil</b>. It was ...",
"title": "Battle of Antietam"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Battles</b> of the American <b>Civil War</b> were <b>fought</b> between April 12, 1861 and May 12\n–13, 1865 in ... and the ABPP on their extensive analysis of <b>significant battles</b> and \nbattlefields. ... <b>First Battle</b> of Lexington, September 13–20, 1861, Missouri ... \n<b>Union</b> victory: In the largest <b>battle fought</b> between Confederate and Black troops,\n ...",
"title": "List of American Civil War battles"
},
{
"snippet": "Opening paragraph claims, "It was the <b>first major battle</b> in the American <b>Civil War</b> \nto take place on <b>Union soil</b>. ... see List of <b>battles fought</b> in Kentucky) and Missouri\n ...",
"title": "Talk:Battle of Antietam"
},
{
"snippet": "Texas declared its secession from the <b>Union</b> on February 1, 1861, and joined the \nConfederate ... Some Texan military units <b>fought</b> in the <b>Civil War</b> east of the \nMississippi River, but ... One of the negative votes is enshrined in Texas <b>history</b> \nbooks. ... army and Texas regiments <b>fought</b> in every <b>major battle</b> throughout the \nwar.",
"title": "Texas in the American Civil War"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Brandy Station, also called the <b>Battle</b> of Fleetwood Hill, was the \nlargest predominantly cavalry engagement of the American <b>Civil War</b>, as well as \nthe largest ever to take place on American <b>soil</b>. It was <b>fought</b> on June 9, 1863, \naround Brandy Station, Virginia, at the ... For the <b>first</b> time in the <b>Civil War</b>, <b>Union</b> \ncavalry matched the Confederate ...",
"title": "Battle of Brandy Station"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Perryville was <b>fought</b> on October 8, 1862, in the Chaplin Hills west \nof Perryville, Kentucky, as the culmination of the Confederate Heartland Offensive \n(Kentucky Campaign) during the American <b>Civil War</b>. ... <b>Union</b> forces <b>first</b> \nskirmished with Confederate cavalry on the Springfield Pike before the fighting \nbecame ...",
"title": "Battle of Perryville"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Gettysburg was <b>fought</b> July 1–3, 1863, in and around the town of \nGettysburg, Pennsylvania, by <b>Union</b> and Confederate forces during the American \n<b>Civil War</b>. The <b>battle</b> involved the largest number of casualties of the entire war \nand is ... The <b>first major</b> action of the campaign took place on June 9 between \ncavalry ...",
"title": "Battle of Gettysburg"
},
{
"snippet": "The state of New York during the American <b>Civil War</b> was a <b>major</b> influence in \nnational politics, the <b>Union</b> war effort, and the media coverage of the war. New \nYork was the most populous state in the <b>Union</b> during the <b>Civil War</b>, and ... No \n<b>Civil War battles</b> were <b>fought</b> within the Empire State, although Confederate \nagents did ...",
"title": "New York in the American Civil War"
},
{
"snippet": "The U.S. state of West Virginia was formed out of western Virginia and added to \nthe <b>Union</b> as a ... On May 28, 1861 one of the <b>first</b> trials of the <b>Civil War</b> for \nsabotage took place in ... The <b>Battle</b> of Scary Creek was a minor <b>battle fought</b> \nduring the American <b>Civil War</b> across the ... 194; ^ Hardway, Ronald V., "On Our \nOwn <b>Soil</b>.",
"title": "West Virginia in the American Civil War"
},
{
"snippet": "The concept of an invasion of the United States relates to military theory and \ndoctrine which ... The American <b>Civil War</b> may be seen as an invasion of home \nterritory to some ... the <b>first significant</b> foreign occupation of American <b>soil</b> since \nthe War of 1812. ... In Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, the <b>battle</b> spreads to New \nYork.",
"title": "Invasion of the United States"
}
]
},
{
"query": "What was the first major battle of the civil war fought on union soil?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Antietam /ænˈtiːtəm/, also known as the <b>Battle</b> of Sharpsburg, \nparticularly in the Southern United States, was a <b>battle</b> of the American <b>Civil War</b>, \n<b>fought</b> on September 17, 1862, ... it was the <b>first</b> field army–level engagement in \nthe Eastern Theater of the American <b>Civil War</b> to take place on <b>Union soil</b>. It was ...",
"title": "Battle of Antietam"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Battles</b> of the American <b>Civil War</b> were <b>fought</b> between April 12, 1861 and May 12\n–13, 1865 in ... and the ABPP on their extensive analysis of <b>significant battles</b> and \nbattlefields. ... <b>First Battle</b> of Lexington, September 13–20, 1861, Missouri ... \n<b>Union</b> victory: In the largest <b>battle fought</b> between Confederate and Black troops,\n ...",
"title": "List of American Civil War battles"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Chickamauga, <b>fought</b> on September 18 – 20, 1863, between U.S. \nand Confederate forces in the American <b>Civil War</b>, marked the end of a <b>Union</b> ... It \nwas the <b>first major battle</b> of the war <b>fought</b> in Georgia, the most <b>significant Union</b> \ndefeat ... Brannan's division was holding its <b>ground</b> against Forrest and his \ninfantry ...",
"title": "Battle of Chickamauga"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>First Battle</b> of Bull Run also known as the <b>First Battle</b> of Manassas was the \n<b>first major battle</b> of the American <b>Civil War</b> and was a Confederate victory. The \n<b>battle</b> was <b>fought</b> on July 21, 1861 in Prince William County, Virginia, just ... Irvin \nMcDowell led his unseasoned <b>Union</b> Army across Bull Run against the equally ...",
"title": "First Battle of Bull Run"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Shiloh was a <b>battle</b> in the Western Theater of the American <b>Civil War</b>\n, <b>fought</b> April 6–7, 1862, in southwestern Tennessee. A <b>Union</b> force known as the \nArmy of the Tennessee (<b>Major</b> General Ulysses ... On April 6, the <b>first</b> day of the \n<b>battle</b>, the Confederates struck with the intention of driving the <b>Union</b> defenders ...",
"title": "Battle of Shiloh"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Gettysburg was <b>fought</b> July 1–3, 1863, in and around the town of \nGettysburg, Pennsylvania, by <b>Union</b> and Confederate forces during the American \n<b>Civil War</b>. The <b>battle</b> involved the largest number of casualties of the entire war \nand is ... The <b>first major</b> action of the campaign took place on June 9 between \ncavalry ...",
"title": "Battle of Gettysburg"
},
{
"snippet": "Opening paragraph claims, "It was the <b>first major battle</b> in the American <b>Civil War</b> \nto take place on <b>Union soil</b>. ... see List of <b>battles fought</b> in Kentucky) and Missouri\n ...",
"title": "Talk:Battle of Antietam"
},
{
"snippet": "Texas declared its secession from the <b>Union</b> on February 1, 1861, and joined the \nConfederate ... Some Texan military units <b>fought</b> in the <b>Civil War</b> east of the \nMississippi River, but ... One of the negative votes is enshrined in Texas <b>history</b> \nbooks. ... army and Texas regiments <b>fought</b> in every <b>major battle</b> throughout the \nwar.",
"title": "Texas in the American Civil War"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Battle</b> of Wilson's Creek was the <b>first major battle</b> of the Trans-Mississippi \nTheater of the American <b>Civil War</b>. It was <b>fought</b> on August 10, 1861, near \nSpringfield, Missouri. ... Lyon became the <b>first Union</b> general to be killed in the \nwar; he was shot in the heart on Bloody Hill at about 9:30 a.m. while leading the \n2nd Kansas ...",
"title": "Battle of Wilson's Creek"
},
{
"snippet": "During the American <b>Civil War</b> (1861–1865), Maryland, a slave state, was one of \nthe border ... The <b>first</b> fatalities of the war happened during the Baltimore <b>Civil</b> \n<b>War</b> Riots of ... in the third and last <b>major</b> Southern invasion, was also <b>fought</b> on \nMaryland <b>soil</b>. ... By late summer Maryland was firmly in the hands of <b>Union</b> \nsoldiers.",
"title": "Maryland in the American Civil War"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the man who tortures theon greyjoy? | 6494638087515605397 | Theon Greyjoy | [
"Ramsay Snow"
] | [
"Ramsay Bolton",
"Theon Greyjoy"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"The Bastard of Bolton",
"Ramsay Bolton",
"Ramsay Snow"
],
"question": "Who is the character who tortures Theon Greyjoy in Game of Thrones?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Iwan Rheon"
],
"question": "Who is the actor whose character tortures Theon Greyjoy?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "who tortured theon greyjoy",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Theon Greyjoy</b> is a fictional character in the A Song of Ice and Fire series of \nfantasy novels by ... During the imprisonment, Ramsay severely <b>tortured</b> Theon \nphysically and psychologically before emasculating him and mockingly changing \nhis ...",
"title": "Theon Greyjoy"
},
{
"snippet": "Ramsay Bolton, previously known as Ramsay Snow, is a fictional character in the \nA Song of Ice ... When he is <b>torturing Theon Greyjoy</b>, Ramsay recounts “My \nmother taught me not to throw stones at cripples. But my father taught me to aim \nfor ...",
"title": "Ramsay Bolton"
},
{
"snippet": ""Dark Wings, Dark Words" is the second episode of the third season of HBO's \nfantasy television ... In an unknown location[edit]. <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> has been taken \ncaptive, and despite answering all questions truthfully, is continued to be <b>tortured</b>. \nA boy who claims to be sent by Yara promises to aid Theon.",
"title": "Dark Wings, Dark Words"
},
{
"snippet": "The term boot refers to a family of instruments of <b>torture</b> and interrogation \nvariously designed to cause crushing injuries to the foot and/or leg. The boot has \ntaken ...",
"title": "Boot (torture)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Mhysa" is the third season finale of the American medieval epic fantasy \ntelevision series Game ... Elsewhere, House <b>Greyjoy</b> begins a new military \ncampaign. ... Balon allows <b>Theon's torture</b> to continue, but Yara takes 50 best \nIronborn men to ...",
"title": "Mhysa"
},
{
"snippet": "The third season of the fantasy drama television series Game of Thrones \npremiered in the ... <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> is <b>tortured</b> by unknown captors. Bran, Rickon, \nOsha ...",
"title": "Game of Thrones (season 3)"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Climb" is the sixth episode of the third season of HBO's fantasy television \nseries Game of ... <b>Torturing Theon</b>, the boy threatens to sever his finger if he \ncannot guess the boy's identity and their location. After his finger is flayed for \nseveral ...",
"title": "The Climb (Game of Thrones)"
},
{
"snippet": "Sansa Stark is a fictional character created by American author George R. R. \nMartin. She is a ... Fearful of Ramsay's reaction, Theon and Sansa jump from \nWinterfell's ... She was <b>tortured</b> and humiliated for seasons by the unhinged man-\nboys ... the literal emasculation of <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> and the sexual assault of \nGendry.",
"title": "Sansa Stark"
},
{
"snippet": "A Dance with Dragons is the fifth novel, of seven planned, in the epic fantasy \nseries A Song of ... <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> is a prisoner of the Boltons, mutilated and \ndriven nearly insane by <b>torture</b> at the hands of Roose's sadistic son Ramsay, who \nrenames him "Reek". To cement his rule over the North, Roose Bolton has \nRamsay ...",
"title": "A Dance with Dragons"
},
{
"snippet": "Brienne of Tarth is a fictional character in George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and \nFire series of ... Although the woman who relays this message is <b>tortured</b>, she \ndies before revealing who sent it. ... Brienne, Podrick, and Sansa journey on to \nCastle Black (<b>Theon</b> having returned to the Iron Islands), where Sansa's half-\nbrother ...",
"title": "Brienne of Tarth"
}
]
},
{
"query": "theon greyjoy",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Theon Greyjoy</b> is a fictional character in the A Song of Ice and Fire series of \nfantasy novels by American author George R. R. Martin, and its television \nadaptation ...",
"title": "Theon Greyjoy"
},
{
"snippet": "Alfie Evan Allen (born 11 September 1986) is an English actor. He is best known \nfor playing <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> in the television series Game of Thrones ...",
"title": "Alfie Allen"
},
{
"snippet": "George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire novels feature a sizable cast of \ncharacters. ... When <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> captures Winterfell in A Clash of Kings, \nRickon hides in the crypts. After Winterfell is sacked, he and the wildling woman \nOsha ...",
"title": "List of A Song of Ice and Fire characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Ramsay Bolton, previously known as Ramsay Snow, is a fictional character in the \nA Song of Ice ... However, <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> and the Ironborn capture Winterfell and \nrelease Ramsay in exchange for a vow of service to Theon. When Theon's ...",
"title": "Ramsay Bolton"
},
{
"snippet": "Patrick Gerald Duggan (born 24 March 1945), known professionally as Patrick \nMalahide, is a British actor, known for his roles as Detective Sergeant Albert \nChisholm in the TV series Minder and Balon Greyjoy in the TV series Game of \nThrones. ... and from 2012 to 2016 portrayed Balon Greyjoy, the father of <b>Theon</b> \n<b>Greyjoy</b>, ...",
"title": "Patrick Malahide"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Last of the Starks" is the fourth episode of the eighth season of HBO's \nfantasy television ... well as the final appearances of six actors whose characters \ndied in the previous episode, but were seen as corpses: Alfie Allen (<b>Theon</b> \n<b>Greyjoy</b>), ...",
"title": "The Last of the Starks"
},
{
"snippet": "File talk:<b>Theon Greyjoy</b>-Alfie Allen.jpg. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. \nJump to navigation Jump to search. WikiProject Council, hide This file is of \ninterest ...",
"title": "File talk:Theon Greyjoy-Alfie Allen.jpg"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Prince of Winterfell" is the eighth episode of the second season of HBO's \nmedieval fantasy ... It premiered on May 20, 2012. The title of the episode refers \nto <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> as ruler of Winterfell after disposing of the Stark children.",
"title": "The Prince of Winterfell"
},
{
"snippet": "Roose Bolton is a fictional character in the A Song of Ice and Fire series of \nfantasy novels by ... <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> believes that he is even more cruel and \nmenacing than his bastard son, despite Ramsay's more evident depravity. While \nhis voice is ...",
"title": "Roose Bolton"
},
{
"snippet": ""Mhysa" is the third season finale of the American medieval epic fantasy \ntelevision series Game ... Elsewhere, House <b>Greyjoy</b> begins a new military \ncampaign. ... torturer, revealed to be Bolton's bastard Ramsay Snow, nicknames \n<b>Theon</b> Reek.",
"title": "Mhysa"
}
]
},
{
"query": "who tortures theon greyjoy",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Theon Greyjoy</b> is a fictional character in the A Song of Ice and Fire series of \nfantasy novels by ... During the imprisonment, Ramsay severely <b>tortured</b> Theon \nphysically and psychologically before emasculating him and mockingly changing \nhis ...",
"title": "Theon Greyjoy"
},
{
"snippet": "Ramsay Bolton, previously known as Ramsay Snow, is a fictional character in the \nA Song of Ice ... When he is <b>torturing Theon Greyjoy</b>, Ramsay recounts “My \nmother taught me not to throw stones at cripples. But my father taught me to aim \nfor ...",
"title": "Ramsay Bolton"
},
{
"snippet": "George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire novels feature a sizable cast of \ncharacters. ... When <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> captures Winterfell in A Clash of Kings, \nRickon hides in the crypts. ... He takes great pleasure and pride in <b>torturing</b> others \nand enthusiastically practices the Bolton custom of flaying their enemies. Roose \nsuspects ...",
"title": "List of A Song of Ice and Fire characters"
},
{
"snippet": ""Dark Wings, Dark Words" is the second episode of the third season of HBO's \nfantasy television ... In an unknown location[edit]. <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> has been taken \ncaptive, and despite answering all questions truthfully, is continued to be <b>tortured</b>. \nA boy who claims to be sent by Yara promises to aid Theon.",
"title": "Dark Wings, Dark Words"
},
{
"snippet": "The second season of the fantasy drama television series Game of Thrones \npremiered in the ... Tyrion intervenes, resulting in Joffrey retaliating by <b>torturing</b> \nthe two ... <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> (Alfie Allen), a main cast member from the first season, \nbut ...",
"title": "Game of Thrones (season 2)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Tortures</b> used on the Covenanters panel 1of6. leg screw. The Boots from James \nMitchell in Scots Worthies. Theresiana-Beinschrauben.jpg. The term boot refers \nto a family of instruments of torture and interrogation variously designed to ...",
"title": "Boot (torture)"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Climb" is the sixth episode of the third season of HBO's fantasy television \nseries Game of ... <b>Torturing Theon</b>, the boy threatens to sever his finger if he \ncannot guess the boy's identity and their location. After his finger is flayed for \nseveral ...",
"title": "The Climb (Game of Thrones)"
},
{
"snippet": "The characters from the medieval fantasy television series Game of Thrones are \nbased on their ... <b>Theon Greyjoy</b> of House Greyjoy is the youngest son of Lord \nBalon Greyjoy of the Iron ... Gendry and the rest of recruits are sent to Harrenhal \nwhere Ser Gregor Clegane arbitrarily has many of the prisoners <b>tortured</b> and \nkilled.",
"title": "List of Game of Thrones characters"
},
{
"snippet": "The High Sparrow is a fictional character in the A Song of Ice and Fire series of \nhigh fantasy novels by American author George R. R. Martin and its television ...",
"title": "High Sparrow"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Bear and the Maiden Fair" is the seventh episode of the third season of HBO\n's fantasy ... The boy mocks <b>Theon's</b> sexual prowess, before ordering his men to \nrestrain <b>Theon</b> ... Sepinwall declared that he had no need "to witness more of The \nPassion of the <b>Greyjoy</b>", and Sims considered it "boring and confusing to watch".",
"title": "The Bear and the Maiden Fair"
}
]
}
] |
How many letters are in a scrabble game? | 6689696171830582465 | Scrabble letter distributions | [
"102"
] | [
"Scrabble letter distributions",
"Scrabble"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"26"
],
"question": "How many letters of the alphabet are used in a scrabble game?|How many letters are in an English Scrabble game?|How many different letters are represented in an English Scrabble game?"
},
{
"answer": [
"100"
],
"question": "How many letter tiles are in an English Scrabble game?|How many letter tiles are included in an English Scrabble game?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "scrabble",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Scrabble</b> is a word game in which two to four players score points by placing tiles\n, each bearing a single letter, onto a game board divided into a 15×15 grid of ...",
"title": "Scrabble"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scrabble</b> is an American television game show that was based on the <b>Scrabble</b> \nboard game. Muriel Green of Exposure Unlimited came up with the initial ...",
"title": "Scrabble (game show)"
},
{
"snippet": "Editions of the word board game <b>Scrabble</b> in different languages have differing \nletter distributions of the tiles, because the frequency of each letter of the ...",
"title": "Scrabble letter distributions"
},
{
"snippet": "The North American <b>Scrabble</b> Championship is the largest <b>Scrabble</b> competition \nin North America. The event is currently held every year, and from 2004 through ...",
"title": "North American Scrabble Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "The Official <b>Scrabble</b> Players Dictionary or OSPD is a dictionary developed for \nuse in the game <b>Scrabble</b>, by speakers of American and Canadian English.",
"title": "Official Scrabble Players Dictionary"
},
{
"snippet": "Maven is an artificial intelligence <b>Scrabble</b> player, created by Brian Sheppard. It \nhas been used in official licensed Hasbro <b>Scrabble</b> games.",
"title": "Maven (Scrabble)"
},
{
"snippet": "The World <b>Scrabble</b> Championship (WSC) is the most-prestigious title in \ncompetitive English-language <b>Scrabble</b>. It was held every second year after 1991 \nuntil ...",
"title": "World Scrabble Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "Bingo is a slang term used in <b>Scrabble</b> for a play using all seven of the player's \ntiles. A player who does this receives 50 points in addition to what the word ...",
"title": "Bingo (Scrabble)"
},
{
"snippet": "Super <b>Scrabble</b> is a board game introduced in 2004 and a variant of <b>Scrabble</b>. It \nis played on a 21×21 grid board instead of <b>Scrabble's</b> usual 15×15, and uses ...",
"title": "Super Scrabble"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scrabble</b> is an unincorporated community in Berkeley County, West Virginia, \nUnited States. According to the Geographic Names Information System, the ...",
"title": "Scrabble, West Virginia"
}
]
},
{
"query": "scrabble letters",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Editions of the word board game <b>Scrabble</b> in different languages have differing \n<b>letter</b> distributions of the <b>tiles</b>, because the frequency of each <b>letter</b> of the ...",
"title": "Scrabble letter distributions"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scrabble</b> is a word game in which two to four players score points by placing <b>tiles</b>\n, each bearing a single <b>letter</b>, onto a game board divided into a 15×15 grid of ...",
"title": "Scrabble"
},
{
"snippet": "Bingo is a slang term used in <b>Scrabble</b> for a play using all seven of the player's \n<b>tiles</b>. A player who does this receives 50 points in addition to what the word ...",
"title": "Bingo (Scrabble)"
},
{
"snippet": "Super <b>Scrabble</b> is a board game introduced in 2004 and a variant of <b>Scrabble</b>. It \nis played on a 21×21 grid board instead of <b>Scrabble's</b> usual 15×15, and uses \ntwice as many <b>letter tiles</b>.",
"title": "Super Scrabble"
},
{
"snippet": "Scrabble variants are games created by changing the normal Scrabble rules or \nequipment. ... Anagrab is a word game which is usually played with <b>Scrabble tiles</b>\n. The name is an amalgam of the words 'anagram' (the basic game mechanism) ...",
"title": "Scrabble variants"
},
{
"snippet": "Tile tracking is a technique most commonly associated with the game of <b>Scrabble</b> \nand similar word games. It refers to the practice of keeping track of <b>letters</b> ...",
"title": "Tile tracking"
},
{
"snippet": "Bananagrams is a word game invented by Abraham Nathanson of Pawtucket, \nRhode Island, ... The game is similar to the older <b>Scrabble</b> variant Take Two. ... \nEach player races to create their own word grids by arranging the <b>letters</b> to form ...",
"title": "Bananagrams"
},
{
"snippet": "Upwords is a board game invented by Elliot Rudell and originally published by \nthe Milton ... Upwords is similar to <b>Scrabble</b>, or Words With Friends, in that \nplayers build words using <b>letter tiles</b> on a gridded gameboard. The point of \ndifference is ...",
"title": "Upwords"
},
{
"snippet": "Anagrams is a tile-based word game that involves rearranging <b>letter tiles</b> to form \nwords. ... The distribution of 180 <b>letters</b> for <b>Scrabble</b> Scoring Anagrams (\naccording to a review on funagain.com): ...",
"title": "Anagrams"
},
{
"snippet": "Scrabble Showdown was an American game show created for the American \ncable network The ... Winning a game wins the team a prize and two "Bonus \n<b>Scrabble Tiles</b>". A coin toss before the show determines which team has the \noption to ...",
"title": "Scrabble Showdown"
}
]
},
{
"query": "letters in scrabble",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Editions of the word board game <b>Scrabble</b> in different languages have differing \n<b>letter</b> distributions of the tiles, because the frequency of each <b>letter</b> of the ...",
"title": "Scrabble letter distributions"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scrabble</b> is a word game in which two to four players score points by placing tiles\n, each bearing a single <b>letter</b>, onto a game board divided into a 15×15 grid of ...",
"title": "Scrabble"
},
{
"snippet": "Bingo is a slang term used in <b>Scrabble</b> for a play using all seven of the player's \ntiles. A player ... This strategy is often at direct odds with that of placing high-value \n<b>letters</b> on premium squares. A common misconception is that the 50-point bonus\n ...",
"title": "Bingo (Scrabble)"
},
{
"snippet": "Super <b>Scrabble</b> is a board game introduced in 2004 and a variant of <b>Scrabble</b>. It \nis played on a 21×21 grid board instead of <b>Scrabble's</b> usual 15×15, and uses \ntwice as many <b>letter</b> tiles.",
"title": "Super Scrabble"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scrabble</b> variants are games created by changing the normal <b>Scrabble</b> rules or \nequipment. ... and the rules are very simple: any player who sees a <b>Scrabble</b>-\nvalid word can call it out, take the <b>letters</b>, and lay the word out in front of herself.",
"title": "Scrabble variants"
},
{
"snippet": "Upwords is a board game invented by Elliot Rudell and originally published by \nthe Milton ... Upwords is similar to <b>Scrabble</b>, or Words With Friends, in that \nplayers build words using <b>letter</b> tiles on a gridded gameboard. The point of \ndifference is ...",
"title": "Upwords"
},
{
"snippet": "Anagrams is a tile-based word game that involves rearranging <b>letter</b> tiles to form \nwords. ... The distribution of 180 <b>letters</b> for <b>Scrabble</b> Scoring Anagrams (\naccording to a review on funagain.com): ...",
"title": "Anagrams"
},
{
"snippet": "History of two-<b>letter</b> words in Collins <b>Scrabble</b> Words. Collins <b>Scrabble</b> Words (\nCSW, formerly SOWPODS) is the word list used in English-language ...",
"title": "Collins Scrabble Words"
},
{
"snippet": "Tile tracking is a technique most commonly associated with the game of <b>Scrabble</b> \nand similar word games. It refers to the practice of keeping track of <b>letters</b> ...",
"title": "Tile tracking"
},
{
"snippet": "Francophone <b>Scrabble</b>, or French-language <b>Scrabble</b>, is played by many \nthousands of ... An arbiter is used to choose the <b>letters</b> for the game. He draws \nseven ...",
"title": "Francophone Scrabble"
}
]
}
] |
Who does maisie play in game of thrones? | 7006581699201954250 | Maisie Williams | [
"Arya Stark"
] | [
"Maisie Williams",
"Game of Thrones"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Arya Stark"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Arya Stark"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Arya Stark"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who does maisie play in game of thrones?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Margaret Constance "<b>Maisie</b>" Williams (born 15 April 1997) is an English actress. \nShe made her professional acting debut as Arya Stark in the HBO fantasy \ntelevision series <b>Game of Thrones</b> (2011–2019), for which ... She made her stage \ndebut in Lauren Gunderson's 2018 <b>play</b> I and You at Hampstead Theatre. \nWilliams ...",
"title": "Maisie Williams"
},
{
"snippet": "Arya Stark is a fictional character in American author George R. R. Martin's A \nSong of Ice and ... Introduced in 1996's A <b>Game of Thrones</b>, Arya is the third child \nand younger ... She <b>performs</b> in a Braavosi theatrical <b>play</b>, The Bloody Hand, a \ndramatized ... <b>Maisie</b> Williams <b>plays</b> the role of Arya Stark in the television series.",
"title": "Arya Stark"
},
{
"snippet": "Sophie Belinda Jonas (née Turner; 21 February 1996) is an English actress. She \nis best known for portraying Sansa Stark on the HBO fantasy television series \n<b>Game of Thrones</b> ... Turner's <b>Game of Thrones</b> co-star <b>Maisie</b> Williams was one of \ntwo maids of honour, and Jonas's brothers Nick ... 2020, "What a Man Gotta <b>Do</b>" ...",
"title": "Sophie Turner"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Game of Thrones</b> is an American fantasy drama television series created by \nDavid Benioff and ... Martin <b>did</b> not write an episode for the later seasons, since \nhe wanted to focus on completing the sixth novel (The Winds ... Behaviour \nInteractive is developing a free-to-<b>play</b> strategy game based on the series for \nmobile devices.",
"title": "Game of Thrones"
},
{
"snippet": "Ashildr (also known as Me) is a fictional character in the British science fiction \ntelevision series Doctor Who, portrayed by actress <b>Maisie</b> Williams. ... It's not \npossible to say too much about who or what she's <b>playing</b>, but she is ... "Doctor \nWho met <b>Game of Thrones</b> tonight - but how <b>did</b> the fans react to <b>Maisie</b> Williams' \ndebut?".",
"title": "Ashildr"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Maisie</b> Richardson-Sellers is a British actress. She is known for her recurring role \nas Rebekah ... In early March 2015, it was announced that Richardson-Sellers \nwould <b>play</b> a starring role in Of Kings and Prophets, an ABC drama series that ...",
"title": "Maisie Richardson-Sellers"
},
{
"snippet": ""No One" is the eighth episode of the sixth season of HBO's fantasy television \nseries <b>Game of</b> ... The episode was Peter Dinklage and <b>Maisie</b> Williams' selection \nfor the 68th ... That added to the conflict he felt of what was the right thing to <b>do</b>: \nwhether to send men to Sansa or not. ... So I thought, that's how I'll <b>play</b> the guy.",
"title": "No One (Game of Thrones)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Game of Thrones</b> is an American fantasy drama television series created for HBO \nby David ... In addition, cast members Lena Headey, Emilia Clarke, Kit Harington, \n<b>Maisie</b> ... Peter Dinklage has been nominated for Outstanding Supporting Actor in \na Drama Series eight times for <b>playing</b> Tyrion Lannister, with wins in 2011, ...",
"title": "List of awards and nominations received by Game of Thrones ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Jack Gleeson (born 20 May 1992) is an Irish actor who won critical acclaim \n<b>playing</b> Joffrey Baratheon in the HBO television series <b>Game of Thrones</b> ... "Jack \nGleeson aka King Joffrey <b>Makes</b> Appearance at Wrestling Event". Pro Wrestling \nSheet ...",
"title": "Jack Gleeson"
},
{
"snippet": "Miltos Yerolemou is a British actor best known for his role as Syrio Forel in the \nHBO fantasy TV series <b>Game of Thrones</b>. ... After his graduation, Yerolemou <b>did</b> \nnot take lessons, but instead learned how to act by stage experience. ... In the \nseries, Yerolemou primarily worked with actress <b>Maisie</b> Williams as Arya Stark, \nand ...",
"title": "Miltos Yerolemou"
}
]
},
{
"query": "maisie game of thrones",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Margaret Constance "<b>Maisie</b>" Williams (born 15 April 1997) is an English actress. \nShe made her professional acting debut as Arya Stark in the HBO fantasy \ntelevision series <b>Game of Thrones</b> (2011–2019), for which ...",
"title": "Maisie Williams"
},
{
"snippet": "Sophie Belinda Jonas (née Turner; 21 February 1996) is an English actress. She \nis best known for portraying Sansa Stark on the HBO fantasy television series \n<b>Game of Thrones</b> ... Turner's <b>Game of Thrones</b> co-star <b>Maisie</b> Williams was one of \ntwo maids of honour, and Jonas's brothers Nick and Kevin Jonas served as ...",
"title": "Sophie Turner"
},
{
"snippet": "Arya Stark is a fictional character in American author George R. R. Martin's A \nSong of Ice and ... Introduced in 1996's A <b>Game of Thrones</b>, Arya is the third child \nand younger daughter of Lord Eddard ... Arya is portrayed by English actress \n<b>Maisie</b> Williams in HBO's multi-Emmy-winning television adaptation <b>Game of</b> \n<b>Thrones</b>.",
"title": "Arya Stark"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Game of Thrones</b> is an American fantasy drama television series created for HBO \nby David ... In addition, cast members Lena Headey, Emilia Clarke, Kit Harington, \n<b>Maisie</b> Williams, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Alfie Allen, Sophie Turner, ...",
"title": "List of awards and nominations received by Game of Thrones ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Ashildr (also known as Me) is a fictional character in the British science fiction \ntelevision series Doctor Who, portrayed by actress <b>Maisie</b> Williams. ... "What \nhappened when <b>Maisie</b> Williams swapped <b>Game of Thrones</b> for Doctor Who?".",
"title": "Ashildr"
},
{
"snippet": "The Saturn Award for Best Performance by a Younger Actor is one of the annual \nawards given ... <b>Maisie</b> Williams, <b>Game of Thrones</b>, Arya Stark. 2016 (43rd) ...",
"title": "Saturn Award for Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Mar 21, 2013 <b>...</b> English: English actress <b>Maisie</b> Williams at HBO's "<b>Game Of Thrones</b>" Season 3 \nSeattle Premiere at Cinerama. Date, 21 March 2013, 18:02:09.",
"title": "File:Maisie Williams (March 2013) (headshot).jpg - Wikimedia ..."
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Maisie</b> Richardson-Sellers is a British actress. She is known for her recurring role \nas Rebekah Mikaelson / Eva Sinclair on The CW series The Originals, as well ...",
"title": "Maisie Richardson-Sellers"
},
{
"snippet": ""No One" is the eighth episode of the sixth season of HBO's fantasy television \nseries <b>Game of</b> ... The episode was Peter Dinklage and <b>Maisie</b> Williams' selection \nfor the 68th Primetime Emmy Awards to support their nominations. The episode ...",
"title": "No One (Game of Thrones)"
},
{
"snippet": "Cyberbully is a 2015 British docudrama television film that premiered on Channel \n4 on 15 January 2015. The film stars <b>Maisie</b> Williams as Casey Jacobs, a typical \nteenage girl who ... the central character of Casey Jacobs, noted that she had \nbeen a victim of cyberbullying after being cast as Arya Stark in <b>Game of Thrones</b>.",
"title": "Cyberbully (2015 film)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "On Game of Thrones, what character does Maisie play? ",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Margaret Constance "<b>Maisie</b>" Williams (born 15 April 1997) <b>is</b> an English actress. \nShe made her professional acting debut as Arya Stark in the HBO fantasy \ntelevision series <b>Game of Thrones</b> (2011–2019), for which ... She <b>is</b> nicknamed "\n<b>Maisie</b>" after the <b>character</b> from the comic strip The Perishers. <b>Maisie is</b> the \nyoungest of ...",
"title": "Maisie Williams"
},
{
"snippet": "Arya Stark <b>is</b> a fictional <b>character</b> in American author George R. R. Martin's A \nSong of Ice and ... Introduced in 1996's A <b>Game of Thrones</b>, Arya <b>is</b> the third child \nand younger ... veteran actor Charles Dance (<b>who played</b> Tywin Lannister) when \nArya served ... <b>Maisie</b> Williams <b>plays</b> the role of Arya Stark in the television series.",
"title": "Arya Stark"
},
{
"snippet": "Sophie Belinda Jonas (née Turner; 21 February 1996) <b>is</b> an English actress. She \n<b>is</b> best known for portraying Sansa Stark on the HBO fantasy television series \n<b>Game of Thrones</b> ... Turner's <b>Game of Thrones</b> co-star <b>Maisie</b> Williams was one of \ntwo maids of honour, and Jonas's brothers Nick and Kevin Jonas served as ...",
"title": "Sophie Turner"
},
{
"snippet": "Ashildr (also known as Me) <b>is</b> a fictional <b>character</b> in the British science fiction \ntelevision series Doctor <b>Who</b>, portrayed by actress <b>Maisie</b> Williams. ... It's not \npossible to say too much about <b>who</b> or what she's <b>playing</b>, but she <b>is</b> going to ... "\nWhat happened when <b>Maisie</b> Williams swapped <b>Game of Thrones</b> for Doctor \n<b>Who</b>?".",
"title": "Ashildr"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>characters</b> from the medieval fantasy television series <b>Game of Thrones</b> are \nbased on their ... Arya Stark portrayed by <b>Maisie</b> Williams. ... Despite his position, \nhe remains loyal to Eddard and <b>is</b> good friends with his sons Robb and Jon. ... \nOona Chaplin was originally announced to <b>play</b> a <b>character</b> called Jeyne, which\n ...",
"title": "List of Game of Thrones characters"
},
{
"snippet": ""No One" <b>is</b> the eighth episode of the sixth season of HBO's fantasy television \nseries <b>Game of</b> ... The episode was Peter Dinklage and <b>Maisie</b> Williams' selection \nfor the 68th Primetime ... So I thought, that's how I'll <b>play</b> the guy. ... Love \npreviously had become known for his impressions of various <b>Game of Thrones</b> \n<b>characters</b>, ...",
"title": "No One (Game of Thrones)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Game of Thrones is</b> an American fantasy drama television series created for HBO \nby David ... In addition, cast members Lena Headey, Emilia Clarke, Kit Harington, \n<b>Maisie</b> ... Actor, <b>Character</b>, Tenure, Nominations, Awards ... in a Drama Series \neight times for <b>playing</b> Tyrion Lannister, with wins in 2011, 2015, 2018 and 2019.",
"title": "List of awards and nominations received by Game of Thrones ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Jack Gleeson (born 20 May 1992) <b>is</b> an Irish actor <b>who</b> won critical acclaim \n<b>playing</b> Joffrey Baratheon in the HBO television series <b>Game of Thrones</b> ...",
"title": "Jack Gleeson"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Game of Thrones is</b> an American fantasy drama television series created by \nDavid Benioff and ... Although the extras <b>who play</b> Wildlings and the Night's \nWatch often wear hats (normal in a cold climate), members of the principal ... "\n<b>Maisie</b> Williams overjoyed as <b>Game of Thrones</b> marches into Guinness World \nRecords 2016".",
"title": "Game of Thrones"
},
{
"snippet": "The first season of the fantasy drama television series <b>Game of Thrones</b> \npremiered on HBO on April 17, 2011 in the U.S. and concluded on June 19, 2011\n. It consists of ten episodes, each of approximately 55 minutes. The series <b>is</b> \nbased on A <b>Game of Thrones</b>, the first novel in the A Song of Ice ... Newer actors \nwere cast as the younger generation of <b>characters</b>, such as ...",
"title": "Game of Thrones (season 1)"
}
]
}
] |
Who did andy murray beat in wimbledon finals? | 7063731227367330583 | Andy Murray | [
"Milos Raonic"
] | [
"Andy Murray career statistics",
"Andy Murray"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Novak Djokovic"
],
"question": "Who did Andy Murray beat in the 2013 Wimbledon finals?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Milos Raonic"
],
"question": "Who did Andy Murray beat in the 2016 Wimbledon finals?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who did andy murray beat in wimbledon finals?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Murray</b> then <b>had</b> quarter-<b>final</b> ... and in the quarter-<b>finals</b>, he <b>was beaten</b> by ...",
"title": "Andy Murray"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Andy Murray</b> is a professional tennis player <b>who is the</b> current world No. 125 in \nthe ATP rankings. He <b>is the</b> reigning Olympic champion, having won the men's \nsingles tennis <b>tournament</b> at the 2016 Rio Olympics. He has reached eleven \ngrand slam <b>finals</b> in total: he won the 2016 <b>Wimbledon Championships</b>, 2013 \n<b>Wimbledon</b> ... In the <b>final</b> he <b>defeated</b> Novak Djokovic in straight sets to clinch his \nfirst World ...",
"title": "Andy Murray career statistics"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Andy Murray</b> said after the match that he could not believe that he <b>had</b> won \n<b>Wimbledon</b>: ... I never <b>had</b> experience on my side, to <b>beat</b> him <b>was</b> so tough, it \n<b>was</b> such a tough match. — Andy ...",
"title": "2013 Wimbledon Championships – Men's singles final"
},
{
"snippet": "The Djokovic–Murray rivalry is a rivalry between two professional tennis players, \nNovak Djokovic of Serbia and <b>Andy Murray</b> of ... However, since Murray won the \n2013 <b>Wimbledon Championships</b>, Djokovic has taken a ... <b>Andy Murray was</b> the \ntwo-time defending champion in Shanghai and <b>was</b> going for his third successive\n ...",
"title": "Djokovic–Murray rivalry"
},
{
"snippet": "This a list of career achievements by <b>Andy Murray</b>. At the 2012 US Open, Murray \nbecame the first British player since 1977, and the first British man since 1936, to \nwin a Grand Slam singles <b>tournament</b>, when he <b>defeated</b> Novak Djokovic in the \n<b>final</b> in five sets. ... On 7 July 2013, Murray won the 2013 <b>Wimbledon</b> \n<b>Championships</b>, becoming ...",
"title": "List of career achievements by Andy Murray"
},
{
"snippet": "At <b>Wimbledon</b>, <b>Murray made</b> it through his first three matches without ... <b>Murray</b> \nthen <b>beat</b> Lu Yen-hsun of Chinese Taipei in round two, and ... in four to set up a \nfourth Grand Slam <b>final</b> against Novak Djokovic, the ...",
"title": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season"
},
{
"snippet": "... his ninth consecutive quarter-<b>final</b> at <b>Wimbledon</b>. ... <b>who had beaten</b> Federer in \nthe semi <b>finals</b>, while Djokovic <b>had</b> ...",
"title": "2016 Andy Murray tennis season"
},
{
"snippet": "In tennis, the quartet of men's singles players comprising Roger Federer, Rafael \nNadal, Novak ... Novak Djokovic and <b>Andy Murray were</b> born a week apart, \nplayed each other as juniors and <b>made</b> their Grand Slam <b>tournament</b> debuts in \n2005. Djokovic ... Federer <b>beat</b> Murray in straight sets in the semi-<b>finals</b> of \n<b>Wimbledon</b>.",
"title": "Big Four (tennis)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Andy Murray defeated</b> Novak Djokovic in the <b>final</b> in straight sets, 6–4, 7–5, 6–4 \nto win the ... Federer and Nadal both exiting the <b>tournament</b> early <b>made</b> this the \nfirst time since the 2004 French Open that neither of them appeared in the ...",
"title": "2013 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Singles"
},
{
"snippet": "His first real test <b>was</b> against 27th seed Roberto Bautista Agut, but the Spaniard \nproved ... <b>Murray</b> then <b>defeated</b> big serving Kevin Anderson, the 20th seed, to \nreach his seventh consecutive <b>Wimbledon</b> quarter-<b>final</b>.",
"title": "2014 Andy Murray tennis season"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Andy Murray wimbledon win",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "In the semi-<b>finals Murray</b> lost to 5th seed and eventual <b>champion</b> Rafael ...",
"title": "Andy Murray"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Murray</b> has a 101–83 (.549) <b>record</b> against players who were, at the ... <b>Andy</b> \nRoddick, 5, <b>Wimbledon</b>, London, England, Grass, 3R ...",
"title": "Andy Murray career statistics"
},
{
"snippet": "This a list of career achievements by <b>Andy Murray</b>. At the 2012 US Open, Murray \nbecame the ... On 7 July 2013, Murray won the 2013 <b>Wimbledon</b> Championships, \nbecoming the first British player to <b>win</b> a <b>Wimbledon</b> senior singles title since \nVirginia Wade in 1977, and the first British man to <b>win</b> the Men's Singles ...",
"title": "List of career achievements by Andy Murray"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Andy Murray</b> said after the match that he could not ... my career, so to manage to \n<b>win</b> the tournament today.",
"title": "2013 Wimbledon Championships – Men's singles final"
},
{
"snippet": "The pair went on to reach the <b>finals</b> ... <b>Andy Murray</b> won his next singles ... In July, \nMurray/Peers reached the final of the 2015 <b>Wimbledon</b> Championships finishing \nas ...",
"title": "Jamie Murray"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2012 <b>Wimbledon</b> Men's Singles final was the championship tennis match of \nthe Men's Singles tournament at the 2012 <b>Wimbledon</b> Championships. It pitted \nsix-time <b>champion</b> Roger Federer and <b>Andy Murray</b> against each ...",
"title": "2012 Wimbledon Championships – Men's singles final"
},
{
"snippet": "The Djokovic–Murray rivalry is a rivalry between two professional tennis players, \nNovak Djokovic of Serbia and <b>Andy Murray</b> of ... However, since Murray won the \n2013 <b>Wimbledon</b> Championships, Djokovic has taken a ... <b>Andy Murray</b> was the \ntwo-time defending <b>champion</b> in Shanghai and was going for his third successive\n ...",
"title": "Djokovic–Murray rivalry"
},
{
"snippet": "At <b>Wimbledon</b>, <b>Murray</b> made it through his first three matches ... just weeks earlier\n, took <b>Murray's</b> Grand Slam match <b>wins</b> total to 107, ...",
"title": "2013 Andy Murray tennis season"
},
{
"snippet": "... his ninth consecutive quarter-final at <b>Wimbledon</b>. ... <b>Murray</b> won the match in \nstraight sets, <b>winning</b> his third Grand ...",
"title": "2016 Andy Murray tennis season"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Finals</b>[edit] ... Novak Djokovic, 4, 5, 4. 2, United Kingdom <b>Andy Murray</b>, 6, 7, 6. \nPoland Łukasz Kubot, 5, 4, 4. 24, Poland Jerzy Janowicz, 7 ...",
"title": "2013 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Singles"
}
]
}
] |
When did the red river rebellion start and end? | 7129216142000252611 | Red River Rebellion | [
"1869 -- 1870"
] | [
"Red River Rebellion"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"1869"
],
"question": "When did the Red River Rebellion start ?|When did the red river rebellion start?"
},
{
"answer": [
"1870"
],
"question": "When did the Red River Rebellion end ?|When did the red river rebellion end?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "red river rebellion",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Red River Rebellion</b> was the sequence of events that led up to the 1869 \nestablishment of a provisional government by the Métis leader Louis Riel and his\n ...",
"title": "Red River Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "The North-West Rebellion of 1885 was a rebellion by the Métis people under \nLouis Riel and an ... After the <b>Red River Rebellion</b> of 1869–1870, many of the \nMétis moved from Manitoba to the Fort Carlton region of the Northwest Territories,\n ...",
"title": "North-West Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "People of the <b>Red River Rebellion</b>". The following 35 pages \nare in this category, out of 35 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn\n ...",
"title": "Category:People of the Red River Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>Red River Rebellion</b>". The following 3 pages are in this \ncategory, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:Red River Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "The Wolseley expedition was a military force authorized by Sir John A. \nMacdonald to confront Louis Riel and the Métis in 1870, during the <b>Red River</b> \n<b>Rebellion</b>, ...",
"title": "Wolseley expedition"
},
{
"snippet": "Thomas Scott (1 January 1842 – 4 March 1870) was an Irish Protestant who \nemigrated to ... J. M. Bumsted, a specialist on the topic of the <b>Red River Rebellion</b>\n, also discusses many popular portrayals of Thomas Scott in his work, "Thomas ...",
"title": "Thomas Scott (Orangeman)"
},
{
"snippet": "Battles/wars, <b>Red River Rebellion</b> · National Historic Site of Canada. Official \nname, Forts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar National Historic Site of Canada. \nDesignated, 1924. Fort Garry, also known as Upper Fort Garry, was a Hudson's \nBay Company trading post at the ...",
"title": "Fort Garry"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir John Christian Schultz, KCMG (January 1, 1840 – April 13, 1896) was a \nManitoba politician ... During the <b>Red River Rebellion</b> of 1869–70, Schultz \nemerged as one of the leading opponents of Louis Riel's provisional government \n(which ...",
"title": "John Christian Schultz"
},
{
"snippet": "Louis David Riel was a Canadian politician, a founder of the province of \nManitoba, and a ... The first resistance led by Riel became known as the <b>Red</b> \n<b>River Rebellion</b> of 1869–1870. The provisional government established by Riel \nultimately ...",
"title": "Louis Riel"
},
{
"snippet": "John Bruce (or Brousse) (1837 – 26 October 1893) was the first president of the \nMétis provisional government at the Red River Colony during the <b>Red River</b> \n<b>Rebellion</b> of 1869.",
"title": "John Bruce (Canada)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When did the red river rebellion start and end?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Red River Rebellion was</b> the sequence of events that led up to the 1869 \nestablishment of a ... The arrival of troops marked the <b>end</b> of the Rebellion. ... \nprovince without being responsible for any events that may <b>occur</b> within the \nprovince.",
"title": "Red River Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "The North-West Rebellion of 1885 <b>was</b> a rebellion by the Métis people under \nLouis Riel and an ... After the <b>Red River Rebellion</b> of 1869–1870, many of the \nMétis moved from Manitoba to the Fort Carlton region of the ... By the <b>end</b> of the \n1870s, the stage <b>was</b> set for discontent among the aboriginal people of the \nprairies: the ...",
"title": "North-West Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "People of the <b>Red River Rebellion</b>". The following 35 pages \nare in this category, out of 35 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn\n ...",
"title": "Category:People of the Red River Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "The Wolseley expedition <b>was</b> a military force authorized by Sir John A. \nMacdonald to confront Louis Riel and the Métis in 1870, during the <b>Red River</b> \n<b>Rebellion</b>, at the Red River Colony in ... On August 3, 1870 the first brigades of \ncanoes <b>started</b> their journey towards Fort Garry, leaving from the shores of \nShebandowan.",
"title": "Wolseley expedition"
},
{
"snippet": "Thomas Scott (1 January 1842 – 4 March 1870) <b>was</b> an Irish Protestant who \nemigrated to ... His political involvement in the Red River Settlement from then on \nled to his capture at Fort Garry where he <b>was</b> held hostage with ... Scott <b>was</b> \nemployed by the Canadian government as a surveyor during the <b>Red River</b> \n<b>Rebellion</b>.",
"title": "Thomas Scott (Orangeman)"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>Red River Rebellion</b>". The following 3 pages are in this \ncategory, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:Red River Rebellion"
},
{
"snippet": "Battles/wars, <b>Red River Rebellion</b> · National Historic Site of Canada. Official \nname, Forts Rouge, Garry, and Gibraltar National Historic Site of Canada. \nDesignated, 1924. Fort Garry, also known as Upper Fort Garry, <b>was</b> a Hudson's \nBay Company trading post at the ... to grant the Friends an additional two years to \n<b>finish</b> raising the needed funds.",
"title": "Fort Garry"
},
{
"snippet": "Louis David Riel <b>was</b> a Canadian politician, a founder of the province of \nManitoba, and a political leader of the Métis people of the Canadian Prairies. He \nled two rebellions against the government of Canada and its first ... The first \nresistance led by Riel became known as the <b>Red River Rebellion</b> of 1869–1870.",
"title": "Louis Riel"
},
{
"snippet": "The Red River Colony (or Selkirk Settlement) <b>was</b> a colonization project set up in \n1811 by ... <b>end</b> of fur trade inspired conflicts on the plains, the Red River \nsettlement <b>was</b> ... The Resistance <b>was</b> an unarmed conflict <b>started</b> by the Métis \nbecause ... the Manitoba Act <b>was</b> mostly created to prevent another <b>Red River</b> \n<b>Rebellion</b>.",
"title": "Red River Colony"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir John Christian Schultz, KCMG (January 1, 1840 – April 13, 1896) <b>was</b> a \nManitoba politician ... During the <b>Red River Rebellion</b> of 1869–70, Schultz \nemerged as one of the leading opponents of Louis Riel's provisional government \n(which ... He <b>started</b> another local paper, the Manitoba Liberal, before the year \n<b>was</b> over.",
"title": "John Christian Schultz"
}
]
}
] |
One of romes most famous narrative art monuments is? | 7275737276129978196 | Roman art | [
"Trajan 's column"
] | [
"Narrative art",
"Trajan's Column"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Trajan's Column"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Trajan's Column"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Column of Trajan",
"Trajan's Column"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "One of romes most famous narrative art monuments is?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Roman <b>art</b> refers to the visual <b>arts</b> made in Ancient <b>Rome</b> and in the territories of \nthe Roman ... Pliny, Ancient <b>Rome's most important</b> historian concerning the <b>arts</b>, \nrecorded ... <b>One</b> exception is the Roman bust, which did not include the \nshoulders. ... <b>known</b> landscape <b>painting</b> only as the backdrop to civil or military \n<b>narrative</b> ...",
"title": "Roman art"
},
{
"snippet": "Trajan's Column is a Roman triumphal column in <b>Rome</b>, Italy, that \ncommemorates Roman ... Completed in AD 113, the freestanding column is <b>most</b> \n<b>famous</b> for its spiral bas ... The <b>narrative</b> band expands from about <b>1</b> metre (3.3 \nfeet) at the base of the ... was a glorifying <b>monument</b>, upholding Trajan as <b>Rome's</b> \ngreat emperor.",
"title": "Trajan's Column"
},
{
"snippet": "Ancient Greece · Hellenistic · <b>Rome</b> · v · t · e. Persian <b>art</b> or Iranian <b>art</b> has <b>one</b> of \nthe richest <b>art</b> heritages in <b>world</b> history and has been ... In ancient times the \nsurviving <b>monuments</b> of Persian <b>art</b> are <b>notable</b> for a tradition ... Even in <b>narrative</b> \nrepresentations, figures look frontally out to the viewer rather than at each other, ...",
"title": "Persian art"
},
{
"snippet": "Early Christian <b>art</b> and architecture or Paleochristian <b>art</b> is the <b>art</b> produced by \nChristians or ... The "almost total absence from Christian <b>monuments</b> of the \nperiod of persecutions ... In <b>one</b> of the earliest <b>known</b> Trinitarian images, "the \nThrone of God as a ... With <b>more</b> space, <b>narrative</b> images containing many \npeople develop in ...",
"title": "Early Christian art and architecture"
},
{
"snippet": "Gian Lorenzo (or Gianlorenzo) Bernini was an Italian sculptor and architect. \nWhile a major figure in the <b>world</b> of architecture, he was, also and even <b>more</b> ... \nAs <b>one</b> scholar has commented, "What Shakespeare is to drama, Bernini may be \nto ... At the end of April 1665, and still considered the <b>most important artist</b> in \n<b>Rome</b>, ...",
"title": "Gian Lorenzo Bernini"
},
{
"snippet": "Byzantine monumental Church mosaics are <b>one</b> of the great achievements of \nmedieval <b>art</b>. These are from Monreale in Sicily from the late 12th century. The \nmedieval <b>art</b> of the Western <b>world</b> covers a vast scope of time and place, over \n1000 years ... Calligraphy, ornament and the decorative <b>arts</b> generally were <b>more</b> \n<b>important</b> ...",
"title": "Medieval art"
},
{
"snippet": "The study of Roman sculpture is complicated by its relation to Greek sculpture. \nMany <b>examples of</b> even the <b>most famous</b> Greek sculptures, such as the Apollo \nBelvedere and Barberini Faun, are <b>known</b> only from Roman Imperial or \nHellenistic "copies". At <b>one</b> time, this imitation was taken by <b>art</b> historians as \nindicating a ... Even the <b>most important</b> imperial <b>monuments</b> now showed stumpy,\n ...",
"title": "Roman sculpture"
},
{
"snippet": "Geometric <b>art</b> is a phase of Greek <b>art</b>, characterized largely by geometric motifs in \nvase <b>painting</b> ... <b>One</b> of the characteristic <b>examples of</b> the Late Geometric style is \nan oldest ... The notion of <b>narrative</b> during this time period exists between the \n<b>artist</b> and ... The areas <b>most</b> used for decoration by potters on shapes such as the\n ...",
"title": "Geometric art"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Monuments</b>[show]. <b>World</b> Heritage Sites · Symbols[show]. Flag · Coat of arms · \nFlag of Italy.svg Italy portal · v · t · e · Italy is considered the birthplace of Western \ncivilization and a cultural superpower. Italy has ... The <b>famous</b> elements of Italian \nculture are its <b>art</b>, music, style, and iconic food. Italy was the birthplace of opera, \nand ...",
"title": "Culture of Italy"
},
{
"snippet": "Byzantine <b>art</b> comprises the body of Christian Greek artistic products of the \nEastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, as well as the nations and states that \ninherited culturally from the empire. Though the empire itself emerged from the \ndecline of <b>Rome</b> and lasted until ... <b>One</b> of the <b>most important</b> genres of Byzantine \n<b>art</b> was the icon, an image of ...",
"title": "Byzantine art"
}
]
},
{
"query": "rome's most famous narrative art monument",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Roman art</b> refers to the visual <b>arts</b> made in Ancient <b>Rome</b> and in the territories of \nthe <b>Roman</b> ... In the mid-5th century BC, the <b>most famous</b> Greek <b>artists</b> were \nPolygnotos, ... A native Italian style can be seen in the tomb <b>monuments</b> of \nprosperous ... culminating in the great <b>Roman</b> triumphal columns with continuous \n<b>narrative</b> ...",
"title": "Roman art"
},
{
"snippet": "Trajan's Column is a <b>Roman</b> triumphal column in <b>Rome</b>, Italy, that \ncommemorates <b>Roman</b> ... Completed in AD 113, the freestanding column is <b>most</b> \n<b>famous</b> for its spiral bas ... of the <b>most</b> unusual, disturbing, and violent depictions \nof women in <b>Roman art</b>, the torture scene. ... At the top of the Column was a \n<b>statue</b> of Trajan.",
"title": "Trajan's Column"
},
{
"snippet": "The study of <b>Roman</b> sculpture is complicated by its relation to Greek sculpture. \nMany <b>examples of</b> even the <b>most famous</b> Greek sculptures, such as the ... Early \n<b>Roman art</b> was influenced by the <b>art</b> of Greece and that of the neighbouring ... \nEven the <b>most</b> important imperial <b>monuments</b> now showed stumpy, large-eyed \nfigures ...",
"title": "Roman sculpture"
},
{
"snippet": "Persian <b>art</b> or Iranian <b>art</b> has one of the richest <b>art</b> heritages in <b>world</b> history and \nhas been ... In ancient times the surviving <b>monuments</b> of Persian <b>art</b> are <b>notable</b> \nfor a ... <b>most famous</b> shows the Sassanian king Shapur I on horseback, with the \n<b>Roman</b> ... Even in <b>narrative</b> representations, figures look frontally out to the \nviewer ...",
"title": "Persian art"
},
{
"snippet": "Early Christian <b>art</b> and architecture or Paleochristian <b>art</b> is the <b>art</b> produced by \nChristians or ... the Catacombs of <b>Rome</b>, which include <b>most examples of</b> the \nearliest Christian <b>art</b>. ... The "almost total absence from Christian <b>monuments</b> of \nthe period of ... He was typically shown in <b>narrative</b> scenes, with a preference for \nNew ...",
"title": "Early Christian art and architecture"
},
{
"snippet": "Chartres Cathedral, also <b>known</b> as the Cathedral of Our Lady of Chartres is a \n<b>Roman</b> Catholic ... In 2009, the <b>Monuments</b> Historiques division of the French \nMinistry of Culture began an ... The other 12th-century window, perhaps the <b>most</b> \n<b>famous</b> at Chartres, is the ... All that's left <b>most artists</b> seem to feel these days, is \nman.",
"title": "Chartres Cathedral"
},
{
"snippet": "The medieval <b>art</b> of the Western <b>world</b> covers a vast scope of time and place, \nover 1000 years ... Medieval <b>art</b> in Europe grew out of the artistic heritage of the \n<b>Roman</b> Empire ... the tomb-<b>paintings</b> in <b>popular</b> styles of the catacombs of <b>Rome</b>, \nbut by the end ... Romanesque <b>statue</b> of the Virgin as Seat of Wisdom, 12th \ncentury.",
"title": "Medieval art"
},
{
"snippet": "Funerary <b>art</b> is any work of <b>art</b> forming, or placed in, a repository for the remains \nof the dead. ... Catacombs, of which the <b>most famous</b> examples are those in \n<b>Rome</b> and Alexandria, are underground cemeteries connected by tunnelled \npassages. ... A Ka <b>statue</b> effigy of the deceased might be walled up in a serdab \nconnected ...",
"title": "Funerary art"
},
{
"snippet": "Etruscan <b>art</b> was produced by the Etruscan civilization in central Italy between the \n10th and 1st ... Etruscan sculpture in cast bronze was <b>famous</b> and widely \nexported, but ... Tombs have produced all the fresco wall-<b>paintings</b>, which show \nscenes of feasting and some <b>narrative</b> ... The Orator, Romano-Etruscan bronze \n<b>statue</b>, c.",
"title": "Etruscan art"
},
{
"snippet": "Patrick Victor Martindale White (28 May 1912 – 30 September 1990) was an \nAustralian writer who published 12 novels, three short-story collections, and eight \nplays, from 1935 to 1987. White's fiction employs humour, florid prose, shifting \n<b>narrative</b> vantage points ... After being admitted to the degree of Bachelor of <b>Arts</b> \nin 1935, White briefly ...",
"title": "Patrick White"
}
]
},
{
"query": "rome art monument",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Roman</b> funerary <b>art</b> changed throughout the course of the Republic and the \nEmpire and ... While <b>monuments</b> to the dead were constructed within <b>Roman</b> \ncities, the remains themselves were interred outside the cities. After the end of \nEtruscan ...",
"title": "Roman funerary art"
},
{
"snippet": "Ancient <b>Roman</b> architecture adopted the external language of classical Greek \narchitecture for ... The triumphal arch changed from being a personal <b>monument</b> \nto being an essentially propagandistic one, ... Inscriptions on <b>Roman</b> triumphal \narches were works of <b>art</b> in themselves, with very finely cut, sometimes gilded \nletters.",
"title": "Ancient Roman architecture"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Roman</b> Capriccio: The Pantheon and Other <b>Monuments</b> is a 1735 oil <b>painting</b> by \nItalian <b>artist</b> Giovanni Paolo Panini, located in the Indianapolis Museum of <b>Art</b>, ...",
"title": "Roman Capriccio: The Pantheon and Other Monuments"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Monument</b> to Nizami Ganjavi the medieval Persian poet, is located in the \ncapital of Italy, <b>Rome</b>, in Villa Borghese gardens, on Viale Madama Letizia Street \n(Italian: Viale Madama Letizia). Salhab Mammadov, People's <b>Artist</b> of Azerbaijan \nand Ali Ibadullayev, ...",
"title": "Monument to Nizami Ganjavi in Rome"
},
{
"snippet": "The Ara Pacis Augustae is an altar in <b>Rome</b> dedicated to Pax, the <b>Roman</b> \ngoddess of Peace. The <b>monument</b> was commissioned by the <b>Roman</b> Senate on \nJuly 4, 13 BC to ... What remains of the altar is otherwise fragmentary, but it \nappears to have been largely functional with less emphasis on <b>art</b> and decoration\n. The interior ...",
"title": "Ara Pacis"
},
{
"snippet": "List of museums in <b>Rome</b> The city contains vast quantities of priceless <b>art</b>, \nsculpture and ... Keats-Shelley <b>Memorial</b> House · Mausoleum of Augustus · \nMAXXI (National Museum of the 21st Century <b>Arts</b>); <b>Monument</b> to Vittorio \nEmanuele II ...",
"title": "List of museums in Rome"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Roman art</b> refers to the visual <b>arts</b> made in Ancient <b>Rome</b> and in the territories of \nthe <b>Roman</b> ... A native Italian style can be seen in the tomb <b>monuments</b> of \nprosperous middle-class Romans, which very often featured portrait busts, and ...",
"title": "Roman art"
},
{
"snippet": "The Arch of Constantine (Italian: Arco di Costantino) is a triumphal arch in <b>Rome</b> \ndedicated to ... Constantine's Arch is an important example, frequently cited in \nsurveys of <b>art</b> history, of the stylistic changes of the ... It remains the most \nimpressive surviving civic <b>monument</b> from <b>Rome</b> in Late Antiquity, but is also one \nof the most ...",
"title": "Arch of Constantine"
},
{
"snippet": "The Culture of <b>Rome</b> in Italy, refers to the <b>arts</b>, high culture, language, religion, \npolitics, libraries, ... The list of the very important <b>monuments</b> of ancient <b>Rome</b> \nincludes the <b>Roman</b> Forum, the Domus Aurea, the Pantheon, Trajan's Column, ...",
"title": "Culture of Rome"
},
{
"snippet": "Trajan's Column is a <b>Roman</b> triumphal column in <b>Rome</b>, Italy, that \ncommemorates <b>Roman</b> ... However, mortal females in <b>Roman</b> state <b>art</b> are so \nrare, it is remarkable that they are included at all in a war ... Traditional \nscholarship held that the Column was a glorifying <b>monument</b>, upholding Trajan \nas <b>Rome's</b> great emperor.",
"title": "Trajan's Column"
}
]
},
{
"query": "column of",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Column of</b> Marcus Aurelius is a Roman victory <b>column in</b> Piazza Colonna, \nRome, Italy. It is a Doric <b>column</b> featuring a spiral relief: it was built in honour of ...",
"title": "Column of Marcus Aurelius"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Column of</b> Phocas (Italian: Colonna di Foca) is a Roman monumental \n<b>column in</b> the Roman Forum of Rome, Italy. Erected in front of the Rostra and ...",
"title": "Column of Phocas"
},
{
"snippet": "Trajan's <b>Column</b> is a Roman triumphal <b>column in</b> Rome, Italy, that \ncommemorates Roman emperor Trajan's victory in the Dacian Wars. It was \nprobably ...",
"title": "Trajan's Column"
},
{
"snippet": "A fifth <b>column is</b> any group of people who undermine a larger group from within, \nusually in favor of an enemy group or nation. The activities of a fifth <b>column</b> can ...",
"title": "Fifth column"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Column of</b> Constantine also known as the Burnt Stone or the Burnt Pillar, is a \nRoman monumental <b>column</b> constructed on the orders of the Roman emperor ...",
"title": "Column of Constantine"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Column of</b> the Immaculate Conception is a nineteenth-century monument in \ncentral Rome depicting the Blessed Virgin Mary, located in what is called ...",
"title": "Column of the Immaculate Conception, Rome"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Column of</b> the Goddess is the popular name given by the citizens of Lille (\nFrance) to the Memorial of the Siege of 1792. The memorial is still in the center of\n ...",
"title": "Column of the Goddess"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Column of</b> Marcian (Turkish: Kıztaşı) is a Roman honorific <b>column</b> erected in \nConstantinople by the praefectus urbi Tatianus (450-c.452) and dedicated to ...",
"title": "Column of Marcian"
},
{
"snippet": "This article deals with the lost <b>column</b> dedicated to Antoninus Pius. For the \n<b>column</b> previously erroneously called this before the Renaissance, see <b>Column</b> \n<b>of</b> ...",
"title": "Column of Antoninus Pius"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>Column of</b> Fire is a 2017 novel by British author Ken Follett, first published on \n12 September 2017. It is the third book in the Kingsbridge Series, and serves as ...",
"title": "A Column of Fire"
}
]
},
{
"query": "roman narrative art monuments",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Narrative art</b> is art that tells a story, either as a moment in an ongoing story or as a \nsequence of ... Trajan's Column is an exceptional example of Imperial <b>Roman</b> \n<b>narrative art</b>. In Christian art the Life of Christ in art and Life of the Virgin supplied\n ...",
"title": "Narrative art"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Roman art</b> refers to the visual <b>arts</b> made in Ancient <b>Rome</b> and in the territories of \nthe <b>Roman</b> ... Vast numbers of Greek <b>statues</b> were imported to <b>Rome</b>, whether as \nbooty or the result of extortion or commerce, ... in relief, culminating in the great \n<b>Roman</b> triumphal columns with continuous <b>narrative</b> reliefs winding around them,\n ...",
"title": "Roman art"
},
{
"snippet": "Trajan's Column is a <b>Roman</b> triumphal column in <b>Rome</b>, Italy, that \ncommemorates <b>Roman</b> ... The <b>narrative</b> band expands from about 1 metre (3.3 \nfeet) at the base of the ... However, mortal females in <b>Roman</b> state <b>art</b> are so rare, \nit is remarkable that ... was a glorifying <b>monument</b>, upholding Trajan as <b>Rome's</b> \ngreat emperor.",
"title": "Trajan's Column"
},
{
"snippet": "Early Christian <b>art</b> and architecture or Paleochristian <b>art</b> is the <b>art</b> produced by \nChristians or ... Early Christian <b>art</b> used not only <b>Roman</b> forms but also <b>Roman</b> \nstyles. ... The "almost total absence from Christian <b>monuments</b> of the period of \npersecutions of ... He was typically shown in <b>narrative</b> scenes, with a preference \nfor New ...",
"title": "Early Christian art and architecture"
},
{
"snippet": "The Low Ham <b>Roman</b> Villa was a <b>Roman</b> courtyard villa located near Low Ham \nin the civil parish of High Ham in the English county of Somerset. It is best known \nfor the extraordinary figured mosaic depicting the story of Aeneas and Dido. The \nsite is a scheduled ancient <b>monument</b>. ... It is the earliest piece of <b>narrative art</b> in \nthe country.",
"title": "Low Ham Roman Villa"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>Roman</b> Fever" is a short story by American writer Edith Wharton. It was first \npublished in Liberty ... “Modernist” Women Writers and <b>Narrative Art</b>. New York: \nNew York UP, 1994. 77-98. Wright, Sarah Bird. "<b>Roman</b> Fever." Edith Wharton A \nto Z: ...",
"title": "Roman Fever"
},
{
"snippet": "The medieval <b>art</b> of the Western world covers a vast scope of time and place, \nover 1000 years ... Medieval <b>art</b> in Europe grew out of the artistic heritage of the \n<b>Roman</b> Empire and the iconographic traditions of the early Christian church. ... \nthe human figure in <b>narrative</b> scenes became confident for the first time in \nNorthern <b>art</b>.",
"title": "Medieval art"
},
{
"snippet": "The study of <b>Roman</b> sculpture is complicated by its relation to Greek sculpture. \nMany examples ... Early <b>Roman art</b> was influenced by the <b>art</b> of Greece and that \nof the ... culminating in the great <b>Roman</b> triumphal columns with continuous \n<b>narrative</b> reliefs ... Even the most important imperial <b>monuments</b> now showed \nstumpy, ...",
"title": "Roman sculpture"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Monument</b> of Aemilius Paullus was erected in the Sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi \nshortly after ... The <b>Romans</b> carry large oval shields (scuta) while the \nMacedonians' shields are rounded. ... The <b>story</b> was told that an oracle had said \nwhichever side started the battle would lose. A <b>Roman</b> horse got ... In A history of \n<b>Roman art</b> (p.",
"title": "Monument of Aemilius Paullus"
},
{
"snippet": "Geometric <b>art</b> is a phase of Greek <b>art</b>, characterized largely by geometric motifs in \nvase <b>painting</b> ... of Dipylon ware placed on the graves as funeral <b>monuments</b>, \nand represent with their height ... The notion of <b>narrative</b> during this time period \nexists between the <b>artist</b> and the audience. ... (1982) The <b>Art</b> of Greece and <b>Rome</b>\n.",
"title": "Geometric art"
}
]
}
] |
Who played the theme song for hawaii five o? | 7368502948550093171 | Hawaii Five-O (album) | [
"the Ventures"
] | [
"Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series)",
"The Ventures",
"Henry Mancini",
"The Ventures discography",
"Hawaii Five-O (album)",
"Hawaii Five-O (1968 TV series)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"the Ventures",
"The Ventures"
],
"question": "Who played the theme song for Hawaii Five-O (2010 series)?|Who played the theme song for the 2010 t.v. series \"Hawaii Five-O\"?"
},
{
"answer": [
"the Ventures",
"The Ventures"
],
"question": "Who played the theme song for the original show \"Hawaii Five O\"?|Who played the theme song for Hawaii Five-O (1968 series)?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who played the theme song for hawaii five o?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> is an American police procedural drama series produced by CBS \nProductions ... Other criminals and organized crime bosses on the islands were \n<b>played</b> by actors such as Ricardo Montalbán, Gavin ... Known for the location, \n<b>theme song</b>, and ensemble cast, <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> contains a heavy use of exterior ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (1968 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> is an instrumental album by the Ventures. It is named for the \npopular 1968 television series, and featured the <b>theme song</b> from the series as its \ntitle track. ... (1961); The Colorful Ventures (1961); The Ventures <b>Play</b> Telstar and \nthe Lonely Bull (1963); The Ventures in Space (1964); Walk, Don't Run, Vol. 2 (\n1964) ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 is an American action police procedural television series that \npremiered on ... The task force is led by Steve McGarrett (Alex <b>O</b>'Loughlin), a \nNavy Reserve ... Dennis Chun is the son of Kam Fong Chun, <b>who played</b> Chin \nHo Kelly in the ... <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 uses the original show <b>theme song</b> composed by \nMorton ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> or <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 may refer to: <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) · List \nof <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) episodes; individual seasons of the series: 1 2 \n3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 · <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (album), 1969, by The Ventures. "<b>Hawaii</b> \n<b>Five</b>-<b>O</b>", the title track and <b>theme song</b> of the 1968 TV series.",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O"
},
{
"snippet": "Morton Stevens (January 30, 1929 – November 11, 1991) was an American film \nscore composer. In 1965, he became director of music for CBS West Coast \noperations. He is probably best known for composing the <b>theme</b> music for <b>Hawaii</b> \n<b>Five</b>-<b>O</b>, ...",
"title": "Morton Stevens"
},
{
"snippet": "The Ventures are an American instrumental rock band, formed in 1958 in \nTacoma, Washington, ... After watching Nokie Edwards <b>play</b> at a nightclub, they \nrecruited him as bass ... each <b>song</b> on several of their albums was chosen to fit a \nspecific <b>theme</b>. ... The <b>theme</b> music of the television show <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> \ncontinues to be ...",
"title": "The Ventures"
},
{
"snippet": "Magnum, P.I. is an American crime drama television series starring Tom Selleck \nas Thomas ... Thomas Sullivan Magnum III is a private investigator <b>played</b> by Tom \nSelleck. ... However, a 2013 episode of the re-booted <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 shows the \ncharacters singing the Magnum, P.I. <b>theme song</b> while discussing which person ...",
"title": "Magnum, P.I."
},
{
"snippet": "Pua A'e La Ka Uwahi <b>O</b> Ka Moe is the seventh episode of the ninth season of \n<b>Hawaii Five</b>-0. ... Richard Herd was cast in the episode to <b>play</b> Milton Cooper, a \nretired Honolulu Police Department detective. ... This episode featured a slightly \nedited version of the <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 <b>theme song</b> for the first time in the series \nhistory.",
"title": "Pua A'e La Ka Uwahi O Ka Moe"
},
{
"snippet": "Charles Sidney Fernandez (born October 12, 1962), is an American former \nprofessional baseball left-handed pitcher, <b>who played</b> in Major League Baseball \n(MLB) for the Los Angeles Dodgers, ... The <b>theme song</b> to <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> was \noften <b>played</b> before his starts at Shea Stadium during his days with the Mets. \nFernandez ...",
"title": "Sid Fernandez"
},
{
"snippet": "Austin Dean "Bud" Brisbois (April 11, 1937 – June 1978) was a jazz and studio \ntrumpet player. He <b>played</b> all styles, including big band lead, jazz soloing, pop, \nrock, country, ... In addition, he <b>played</b> lead trumpet on the <b>theme songs</b> to <b>Hawaii</b> \n<b>Five</b>-<b>O</b> and The Jetsons. In early 1973 Brisbois formed the rock group Butane, ...",
"title": "Bud Brisbois"
}
]
},
{
"query": "hawaii five o theme",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> is an instrumental album by the Ventures. It is named for the \npopular 1968 television series, and featured the <b>theme</b> song from the series as its \ntitle ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Another legacy of the show is the popularity of the <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O theme</b> music. \nThe tune was composed by Morton Stevens, who ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (1968 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 is an American action police procedural television series that \npremiered on ... The task force is led by Steve McGarrett (Alex <b>O</b>'Loughlin), a \nNavy Reserve Lieutenant Commander who is assisted by Detective Danny \nWilliams ... <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 uses the original show <b>theme</b> song composed by \nMorton Stevens.",
"title": "Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> or <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 may refer to: <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) · List \nof <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) episodes; individual seasons of the series: 1 2 \n3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 · <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (album), 1969, by The Ventures. "<b>Hawaii</b> \n<b>Five</b>-<b>O</b>", the title track and <b>theme</b> song of the 1968 TV series.",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O"
},
{
"snippet": "Morton Stevens (January 30, 1929 – November 11, 1991) was an American film \nscore composer. In 1965, he became director of music for CBS West Coast \noperations. He is probably best known for composing the <b>theme</b> music for <b>Hawaii</b> \n<b>Five</b>-<b>O</b>, ...",
"title": "Morton Stevens"
},
{
"snippet": "The Ventures are an American instrumental rock band, formed in 1958 in \nTacoma, Washington, ... The <b>theme</b> music of the television show <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> \ncontinues to be popular. The tune was composed by Morton Stevens, who also ...",
"title": "The Ventures"
},
{
"snippet": "John Joseph Patrick Ryan (December 30, 1920 – January 21, 1998), best known \nby his stage name, Jack Lord, was an American television, film and Broadway \nactor, director and producer. He was known for his starring role as Steve \nMcGarrett in the CBS television program <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>, ...",
"title": "Jack Lord"
},
{
"snippet": "Pua A'e La Ka Uwahi <b>O</b> Ka Moe is the seventh episode of the ninth season of \n<b>Hawaii Five</b>-0. ... Post-production[edit]. This episode featured a slightly edited \nversion of the <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 <b>theme</b> song for the first time in the series history.",
"title": "Pua A'e La Ka Uwahi O Ka Moe"
},
{
"snippet": ""That's What I Like" is a song by Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers. It was the \nsecond single ... This time using "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>" by The Ventures from the TV \nseries <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> as the recurring melodic hook in the record. ... "<b>Theme</b> from \n<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>" by The Ventures; "Let's Twist Again" by Chubby Checker; "Let's \nDance" ...",
"title": "That's What I Like (Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Magnum, P.I. is an American crime drama television series starring Tom Selleck \nas Thomas ... A recurrent <b>theme</b> throughout the last two seasons, starting in the \nepisode "Paper War", involves Magnum's ... time and space (the so-called \nfictional TV universe) between Magnum, P.I. and <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>. For example, in \nSeason 1 ...",
"title": "Magnum, P.I."
}
]
},
{
"query": "hawaii five-o theme song",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> is an instrumental album by the Ventures. It is named for the \npopular 1968 television series, and featured the <b>theme song</b> from the series as its \ntitle ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Another legacy of the show is the popularity of the <b>Hawaii Five-O theme music</b>. \nThe tune was composed by Morton Stevens, who ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (1968 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 is an American action police procedural television series that \npremiered on ... The task force is led by Steve McGarrett (Alex <b>O</b>'Loughlin), a \nNavy Reserve Lieutenant Commander who is assisted by Detective Danny \nWilliams ... <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 uses the original show <b>theme song</b> composed by \nMorton Stevens.",
"title": "Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> or <b>Hawaii</b> Five-0 may refer to: <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) · List \nof <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) episodes; individual seasons of the series: 1 2 \n3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 · <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (album), 1969, by The Ventures. "<b>Hawaii</b> \n<b>Five</b>-<b>O</b>", the title track and <b>theme song</b> of the 1968 TV series.",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O"
},
{
"snippet": "Morton Stevens (January 30, 1929 – November 11, 1991) was an American film \nscore composer. In 1965, he became director of music for CBS West Coast \noperations. He is probably best known for composing the <b>theme music</b> for <b>Hawaii</b> \n<b>Five</b>-<b>O</b>, ...",
"title": "Morton Stevens"
},
{
"snippet": "The Ventures are an American instrumental rock band, formed in 1958 in \nTacoma, Washington, ... The <b>theme music</b> of the television show <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> \ncontinues to be popular. The tune was composed by Morton Stevens, who also ...",
"title": "The Ventures"
},
{
"snippet": "Pua A'e La Ka Uwahi <b>O</b> Ka Moe is the seventh episode of the ninth season of \n<b>Hawaii Five</b>-0. ... Post-production[edit]. This episode featured a slightly edited \nversion of the <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 <b>theme song</b> for the first time in the series history.",
"title": "Pua A'e La Ka Uwahi O Ka Moe"
},
{
"snippet": ""That's What I Like" is a <b>song</b> by Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers. It was the \nsecond single ... This time using "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>" by The Ventures from the TV \nseries <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> as the recurring melodic hook in the record. ... "<b>Theme</b> from \n<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>" by The Ventures; "Let's Twist Again" by Chubby Checker; "Let's \nDance" ...",
"title": "That's What I Like (Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Magnum, P.I. is an American crime drama television series starring Tom Selleck \nas Thomas ... P.I. and <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>. For example, in Season 1, Episode 5: "\nThank Heavens for Little Girls, and Big ... However, a 2013 episode of the re-\nbooted <b>Hawaii</b> Five-0 shows the characters singing the Magnum, P.I. <b>theme song</b> \nwhile ...",
"title": "Magnum, P.I."
},
{
"snippet": "Television drama <b>theme songs</b> (3 C, 10 P). ▻ Music television program <b>theme</b> \n<b>songs</b> (16 P) ... Television news music packages (5 P) ... Happy (Koharu Kusumi \nsong) · Happy Days (TV theme) · Happy Trails (song) · <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (song) ...",
"title": "Category:Television theme songs"
}
]
},
{
"query": "hawaii five o",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Hawaii Five-0 is an American action police procedural television series that \npremiered on ... The idea to bring <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> back to television had been \nunder ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> or Hawaii Five-0 may refer to: <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) · List \nof <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV series) episodes; individual seasons of the series: ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> is an American police procedural drama series produced by CBS \nProductions and created by Leonard Freeman. Set in Hawaii, the show ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (1968 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "For a list of episodes of the original TV series, see List of <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> (1968 TV \nseries) episodes. Hawaii Five-0 2010 logo.svg · Hawaii Five-0 is a police \nprocedural series developed for television by Alex Kurtzman, Roberto ...",
"title": "List of Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series) episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b> is an instrumental album by the Ventures. It is named for the \npopular 1968 television series, and featured the theme song from the series as its \ntitle ...",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Grace Park (born March 14, 1974) is a Canadian actress who played Cylon \nmodel Number ... Park and fellow <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0 co-star Daniel Dae Kim left the \nshow in 2017, leaving the cast ... Some critics noted that the network's "refusal to \npay Kim and Park on matching terms with <b>O</b>'Loughlin and Caan was CBS's \nformal ...",
"title": "Grace Park (actress)"
},
{
"snippet": "Daniel Dae Kim is an American actor, voice actor, and producer. He is known for \nhis roles as Jin-Soo Kwon in Lost, Chin Ho Kelly in Hawaii Five-0, Gavin Park in \nAngel and Johnny Gat in the ... Daniel Dae Kim set of Hawaii Five-O 2013 (\ncropped).jpg. Kim on the set of Hawaii Five-O in October 2013. Born. Kim Dae-\nhyun.",
"title": "Daniel Dae Kim"
},
{
"snippet": "The tenth season of the CBS police procedural drama series Hawaii Five-0 \npremiered on ... From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to navigation Jump \nto search. Not to be confused with Hawaii Five-O (1968 TV series, season 10).",
"title": "Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series, season 10)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of fictional characters in the television series <b>Hawaii Five</b>-0, which \nhas aired on ... In the episode 'Ua Malo'<b>o</b> Ka Wai', Jerry is awarded his very own \nFive-0 badge after he coordinates with Duke Lukela and HPD to rescue Five-0 \nfrom ...",
"title": "List of Hawaii Five-0 (2010 TV series) characters"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of episodes from the ninth season of <b>Hawaii Five</b>-<b>O</b>. Contents. 1 \nBroadcast history; 2 DVD release; 3 Episodes; 4 References. Broadcast history[\nedit].",
"title": "Hawaii Five-O (1968 TV series, season 9)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Henry Mancini ",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Henry</b> Nicola <b>Mancini</b> was an American composer, conductor, arranger, pianist \nand flautist. Often cited as one of the greatest composers in the history of film, ...",
"title": "Henry Mancini"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "Films scored by <b>Henry Mancini</b>". The following 108 pages are \nin this category, out of 108 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn ...",
"title": "Category:Films scored by Henry Mancini"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Henry Mancini</b>: Pink Guitar is a compilation album of popular works by <b>Henry</b> \n<b>Mancini</b>, produced by James R. Jensen and released through Solid Air Records \nin ...",
"title": "Henry Mancini: Pink Guitar"
},
{
"snippet": "Quincy Jones Explores the Music of <b>Henry Mancini</b> is an album by Quincy Jones \nthat contains music composed by <b>Henry Mancini</b>.",
"title": "Quincy Jones Explores the Music of Henry Mancini"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>Henry Mancini</b> tribute albums". The following 4 pages are in \nthis category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:Henry Mancini tribute albums"
},
{
"snippet": ""Moon River" is a song composed by <b>Henry Mancini</b> with lyrics by Johnny Mercer. \nIt was originally performed by Audrey Hepburn in the 1961 movie Breakfast at ...",
"title": "Moon River"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "Compositions by <b>Henry Mancini</b>". The following 4 pages are \nin this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn ...",
"title": "Category:Compositions by Henry Mancini"
},
{
"snippet": "A Merry Mancini Christmas is a 1966 album by <b>Henry Mancini</b> of orchestral and \nchoral arrangements of Christmas music. In addition to traditional Christmas ...",
"title": "A Merry Mancini Christmas"
},
{
"snippet": ""Charade" is a sad lonely Parisian waltz with music by <b>Henry Mancini</b> and lyrics \nby Johnny Mercer performed in the 1963 film of the same name starring by Cary ...",
"title": "Charade (1963 song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Pink Panther Theme" is an instrumental composition by <b>Henry Mancini</b> \nwritten as the theme for the 1963 film The Pink Panther and subsequently ...",
"title": "The Pink Panther Theme"
}
]
},
{
"query": "The Ventures",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Ventures</b> are an American instrumental rock band, formed in 1958 in \nTacoma, Washington, by Don Wilson and Bob Bogle. The band, a quartet for \nmost of its ...",
"title": "The Ventures"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Ventures</b> have released over two hundred albums beginning with Walk Don't \nRun (1960), and over 60 singles. The original US albums and singles are ...",
"title": "The Ventures discography"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Ventures</b> in Space is an LP album by the guitar-based instrumental group \n<b>the Ventures</b>, released in 1964. Information on its jacket states that "All of these ...",
"title": "The Ventures in Space"
},
{
"snippet": "Wild Things! is a 1966 studio album by <b>the Ventures</b>, released on Dolton Records \nBLP-2047 (mono) and BST-8047. A 4-track reel-to-reel release was ...",
"title": "Wild Things!"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Ventures</b> Play Telstar and the Lonely Bull is an album by the band <b>the</b> \n<b>Ventures</b>, released in 1963. It consists entirely of cover versions of popular ...",
"title": "The Ventures Play Telstar and the Lonely Bull"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Venture</b> Bros. is an American adult animated television series that was \ncreated by Christopher McCulloch and Doc Hammer. The series premiered on ...",
"title": "The Venture Bros."
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Ventures</b> a Go-Go is the seventeenth studio album by the band <b>The Ventures</b>\n; released in 1965 on Dolton Records BST 8037 (stereo) and BLP 2037 ...",
"title": "The Ventures a Go-Go"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>The Ventures</b> members". The following 5 pages are in this \ncategory, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:The Ventures members"
},
{
"snippet": "Walk, Don't Run is the debut album by <b>the Ventures</b>, featuring cover versions of \nwell-known songs and original compositions, released in 1960. The LP was ...",
"title": "Walk, Don't Run (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Twist with <b>the Ventures</b> is the fifth studio album by the band <b>The Ventures</b>; \nreleased in 1962 on Dolton Records BST 8010 (stereo) and BLP 2010 (monaural\n).",
"title": "Twist with the Ventures"
}
]
}
] |
Who outlined the progressive reforms and called his policies the square deal? | 7396263459578960448 | Square Deal | [
"Theodore Roosevelt"
] | [
"Political positions of Theodore Roosevelt",
"Square Deal"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Theodore Roosevelt"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Theodore Roosevelt"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Theodore Roosevelt"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who outlined the progressive reforms and called his policies the square deal?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Square Deal</b> was President Theodore Roosevelt's domestic program, which \nreflected <b>his</b> ... A <b>progressive</b> Republican, Roosevelt believed in government \naction to ... moving to the left of <b>his</b> Republican Party base, <b>called</b> for a series of \n<b>reforms</b> that ... <b>His</b> court <b>policies</b> in particular caused <b>his</b> anointed successor, \nWilliam ...",
"title": "Square Deal"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Fair Deal</b> was an ambitious set of proposals put forward by U.S. President \nHarry S. Truman ... Although Truman was unable to implement <b>his Fair Deal</b> \nprogram in its entirety, ... is arguable that the <b>progressive</b> nature of these <b>reforms</b> \n(such as the Water Pollution Law, ... He also <b>named</b> African Americans to federal \nposts.",
"title": "Fair Deal"
},
{
"snippet": "Theodore Roosevelt Jr was an American statesman, politician, conservationist, \nnaturalist, and ... Roosevelt was a sickly child with debilitating asthma, but he \novercame <b>his</b> ... "Bull Moose" Party which <b>called</b> for wide-ranging <b>progressive</b> \n<b>reforms</b>. ... The rules for the <b>Square Deal</b> were "honesty in public affairs, an \nequitable ...",
"title": "Theodore Roosevelt"
},
{
"snippet": "Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919) was the 26th President of the United States (\n1901–1909) and also served as Governor of New York and Vice President. He is \nknown for becoming a leading spokesman for <b>his</b> version of progressivism after \n1890. However, author Daniel Ruddy argues in <b>his</b> book Theodore the Great: ... \nRoosevelt introduced the phrase "<b>Square Deal</b>" to describe <b>his progressive</b> ...",
"title": "Political positions of Theodore Roosevelt"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Progressive Era</b> was a period of widespread social activism and political \nreform across the ... The movement primarily targeted political machines and <b>their</b> \nbosses. ... Many subscribed to Andrew Carnegie's credo <b>outlined</b> in The Gospel \nof ... <b>his</b> "<b>Square Deal</b>" domestic <b>policies</b>, promising the average citizen fairness,\n ...",
"title": "Progressive Era"
},
{
"snippet": "Social democracy is a political, social and economic philosophy that supports \neconomic and ... For a list of parties named as such, see Social Democratic Party. \n... As a <b>policy</b> regime, social democracy became associated with Keynesian ... is \nthat social democrats support practical, <b>progressive reforms</b> of capitalism and are\n ...",
"title": "Social democracy"
},
{
"snippet": "New Nationalism was Theodore Roosevelt's <b>Progressive</b> political platform during \nthe 1912 election. Contents. 1 Speech; 2 Socioeconomic <b>policy</b>; 3 Electoral \n<b>reform</b>; 4 Anti-corporatocracy ... Roosevelt made the case for what he <b>called</b> "the \nNew Nationalism" in a speech in ... New Deal · The New Freedom · <b>Square Deal</b>\n ...",
"title": "New Nationalism (Theodore Roosevelt)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Endicott-Johnson Shoe Company ("E-J") was a prosperous manufacturer of \nshoes based ... George F's reign was dominated by <b>his Square Deal</b> version of \nwelfare ... It was <b>named</b> after Henry B. Endicott (one of the grade schools was \n<b>named</b> Henry ... IBM's "New Deal": Employment <b>Policies</b> of the International \nBusiness ...",
"title": "Endicott Johnson Corporation"
},
{
"snippet": "The New Freedom was Woodrow Wilson's campaign platform in the 1912 \npresidential election in which he <b>called</b> for limited government, and also refers to \nthe <b>progressive</b> programs enacted by Wilson during <b>his</b> first ... In presenting <b>his</b> \n<b>policy</b>, Wilson warned that New Nationalism represented collectivism, while New\n ...",
"title": "The New Freedom"
},
{
"snippet": "The history of the United States from 1865 until 1918 covers the Reconstruction \nEra, the Gilded Age, and the <b>Progressive Era</b> ... Before <b>his</b> assassination in April \n1865, President Abraham Lincoln had ... Roosevelt, a progressive Republican, \n<b>called</b> for a "<b>Square Deal</b>", and initiated a <b>policy</b> of ... <b>Outline</b> of U.S. History.",
"title": "History of the United States (1865–1918)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "progressive reforms and called his policies the square deal",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Square Deal</b> was President Theodore Roosevelt's domestic program, which \nreflected <b>his</b> ... A <b>progressive</b> Republican, Roosevelt believed in government \naction to ... moving to the left of <b>his</b> Republican Party base, <b>called</b> for a series of \n<b>reforms</b> that ... <b>His</b> court <b>policies</b> in particular caused <b>his</b> anointed successor, \nWilliam ...",
"title": "Square Deal"
},
{
"snippet": "The Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt began on September 14, 1901, when \nTheodore ... A <b>Progressive</b> reformer, Roosevelt earned a reputation as a "trust \nbuster" through ... <b>His</b> "<b>Square Deal</b>" included regulation of railroad rates and \npure foods and ... Much of <b>his</b> foreign <b>policy</b> focused on the threats posed by \nJapan in the ...",
"title": "Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt"
},
{
"snippet": "The Progressive Party was a third party in the United States formed in 1912 by \nformer president ... Although Taft entered office determined to advance \nRoosevelt's <b>Square Deal</b> domestic agenda, he stumbled ... The party's platform \nbuilt on Roosevelt's <b>Square Deal</b> domestic program and <b>called</b> for several \n<b>progressive reforms</b>.",
"title": "Progressive Party (United States, 1912)"
},
{
"snippet": "Theodore Roosevelt Jr was an American statesman, politician, conservationist, \nnaturalist, and ... Roosevelt was a sickly child with debilitating asthma, but he \novercame <b>his</b> ... "Bull Moose" Party which <b>called</b> for wide-ranging <b>progressive</b> \n<b>reforms</b>. ... The <b>rules</b> for the <b>Square Deal</b> were "honesty in public affairs, an \nequitable ...",
"title": "Theodore Roosevelt"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Politics</b> portal · v · t · e. The <b>Fair Deal</b> was an ambitious set of proposals put \nforward by U.S. President Harry S. Truman ... Although Truman was unable to \nimplement <b>his Fair Deal</b> program in its entirety, a great deal of ... because it is \narguable that the <b>progressive</b> nature of these <b>reforms</b> (such as the Water \nPollution Law, ...",
"title": "Fair Deal"
},
{
"snippet": "The muckrakers were reform-minded journalists in the <b>Progressive Era</b> in the \nUnited States ... The muckrakers would become known for <b>their</b> investigative \njournalism, evolving ... support for <b>his Square Deal policies</b> among <b>his</b> base in \nthe middle-class electorate. ... Most of these journalists detested being <b>called</b> \nmuckrakers.",
"title": "Muckraker"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Progressive Era</b> was a period of widespread social activism and political \nreform across the ... he championed <b>his</b> "<b>Square Deal</b>" domestic <b>policies</b>, \npromising the average citizen fairness, ... It <b>called</b> for a “New Nationalism” with \nactive supervision of corporations, higher taxes, and unemployment and old-age \ninsurance.",
"title": "Progressive Era"
},
{
"snippet": "Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919) was the 26th President of the United States (\n1901–1909) and also served as Governor of New York and Vice President. He is \nknown for becoming a leading spokesman for <b>his</b> version of progressivism after \n1890. However, author Daniel Ruddy argues in <b>his</b> book Theodore the Great: ... \nRoosevelt introduced the phrase "<b>Square Deal</b>" to describe <b>his progressive</b> ...",
"title": "Political positions of Theodore Roosevelt"
},
{
"snippet": "The New <b>Deal</b> was a series of programs, public work projects, financial <b>reforms</b>, \nand ... The New <b>Deal policies</b> drew from many different ideas proposed earlier in \nthe 20th ... The idea was to give farmers a "<b>fair</b> exchange value" for <b>their</b> products \nin ... for its failure to institute sufficiently <b>progressive</b> tax <b>reform</b>, and its excessive\n ...",
"title": "New Deal"
},
{
"snippet": "Modern liberalism in the United States is the dominant version of liberalism in the \nUnited States ... Out of these three <b>reform</b> periods there emerged the conception \nof a social welfare ... In 1900–1920, liberals <b>called</b> themselves <b>progressives</b>. ... \nmodern liberal positions regarding labor unions, spending and New <b>Deal</b> \n<b>policies</b>.",
"title": "Modern liberalism in the United States"
}
]
}
] |
When did the tv show mash first air? | 7427509262410620899 | M*A*S*H (TV series) | [
"September 17 , 1972"
] | [
"M*A*S*H (TV series)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"1972",
"September 17, 1972",
"September 17 , 1972"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "mash",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "M*A*S*H is an American war comedy-drama television series that aired on CBS \nfrom 1972 to 1983. It was developed by Larry Gelbart, adapted from the 1970 \nfeature film M*A*S*H, which, in turn, was based on Richard Hooker's 1968 novel \n<b>MASH</b>: A Novel About Three Army Doctors.",
"title": "M*A*S*H (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "For other uses, see <b>Mash</b> (disambiguation). "Rosie's Bar" redirects here. For bar \nin Monaco, see The Chatham. Franchise of book, film, and TV series. The \nfingerpost from the M*A*S*H set, as seen in the Smithsonian museum. M*A*S*H \nis an American media franchise consisting of a series of novels, a film, several ...",
"title": "M*A*S*H"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>MASH</b> is a 1970 American black comedy war film directed by Robert Altman and \nwritten by Ring Lardner Jr., based on Richard Hooker's novel <b>MASH</b>: A Novel ...",
"title": "MASH (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>MASH</b> is a multi-player paper-and-pencil game, commonly played by children \nintended to predict one's future. The name is an acronym of "Mansion, Apartment,\n ...",
"title": "MASH (game)"
},
{
"snippet": "In brewing and distilling, <b>mashing</b> is the process of combining a mix of grains – \ntypically malted barley with supplementary grains such as corn, sorghum, rye, ...",
"title": "Mashing"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Mash</b> ingredients, <b>mash</b> bill, mashbill, or grain bill are the materials that brewers \nuse to produce the wort that they then ferment into alcohol. <b>Mashing</b> is the act of ...",
"title": "Mash ingredients"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of characters from the M*A*S*H franchise, covering the various \nfictional characters appearing in the novel <b>MASH</b>: A Novel About Three Army \nDoctors ...",
"title": "List of M*A*S*H characters"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Mobile Army Surgical Hospital</b> (<b>MASH</b>) refers to a United States Army \nmedical unit serving as a fully functional hospital in a combat area of operations.",
"title": "Mobile army surgical hospital (United States)"
},
{
"snippet": "M*A*S*H is an American television series developed by Larry Gelbart and \nadapted from the 1970 feature film <b>MASH</b> It follows a team of doctors and support \nstaff ...",
"title": "List of M*A*S*H episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>MASH</b>: A Novel About Three Army Doctors is a 1968 novel by Richard Hooker (\nthe pen name for former military surgeon Dr. H. Richard Hornberger and writer ...",
"title": "MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When did the TV show MASH first air?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "M*A*<b>S</b>*H is an American <b>television series</b> developed by Larry Gelbart and \nadapted from the ... Recurring characters in the <b>first</b> season consisted of John \nOrchard as Captain "Ugly John" ... Linville left the <b>series</b> at the end of the fifth \nseason and <b>was</b> replaced in the sixth by David ... All episodes are listed in order \nof <b>air</b> date.",
"title": "List of M*A*S*H episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "M*A*<b>S</b>*H is an American war comedy-drama <b>television series</b> that aired on CBS \nfrom 1972 to 1983. It <b>was</b> developed by Larry Gelbart, adapted from the 1970 \nfeature film M*A*<b>S</b>*H, which, in turn, <b>was</b> based on Richard Hooker'<b>s</b> 1968 novel \n<b>MASH</b>: ... M*A*<b>S</b>*H <b>was</b> one of the <b>first</b> network <b>series</b> to feature brief partial \nnudity ...",
"title": "M*A*S*H (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Abyssinia, Henry" is the 72nd episode of the M*A*<b>S</b>*H <b>television series</b>, and the \nfinal episode of the <b>series</b>' third season. <b>First</b> aired on March 18, 1975, and \nwritten by Everett Greenbaum and Jim ... Not all reaction to the airing <b>was</b> \nnegative: On an episode of the variety <b>series</b> Cher that ... "30 years later, \nrevisiting <b>MASH</b>".",
"title": "Abyssinia, Henry"
},
{
"snippet": ""Goodbye, Farewell and Amen" is a <b>television</b> film that served as the 256th and \nfinal episode of the American <b>television series</b> M*A*<b>S</b>*H. Closing out the <b>series</b>' \n11th season, the two-hour episode <b>first</b> aired on CBS on February 28, 1983, \nending the <b>series</b>' ... The episode <b>was</b> written by eight collaborators, including \n<b>series</b> star Alan ...",
"title": "Goodbye, Farewell and Amen"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of the longest-running scripted prime time <b>television series in</b> the \nUnited States. ... seasons, <b>Series</b>, Network, <b>First air</b> date, Last <b>air</b> date, hide\nNumber of episodes ... Family Guy has two episodes that <b>did</b> not originally <b>air</b> on \nFOX.",
"title": "List of longest-running scripted U.S. primetime television series ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The eponymous pilot episode of M*A*<b>S</b>*H <b>was</b> filmed and completed in \nDecember, 1971. ... 1st episode of the first season of M*A*S*H. "Pilot". M*A*S*H \nepisode. Mash pilot Pierce and McIntyre.jpg. Episode no. Season 1 ... Original air \ndate, September 17, 1972 ... No other reference <b>was</b> ever made to him in the \n<b>series</b>.",
"title": "Pilot (M*A*S*H)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>first</b> season of M*A*<b>S</b>*H aired Sundays at 8:00–8:30 pm on CBS. Contents. 1 \nCast; 2 ... MASH TV Cast 1972.jpg. clockwise: Loretta ... season, Title, Directed by\n, Written by, Original <b>air</b> date, Prod. code. 1, 1, "Pilot ... 0-8109-1319-4 . Reiss, \nDavid <b>S</b> (1980). of M*A*<b>S</b>*H: the exclusive inside story of <b>TV's</b> most popular <b>show</b>\n.",
"title": "M*A*S*H (season 1)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>MASH</b> is a 1970 American black comedy war film directed by Robert Altman and \nwritten by Ring Lardner Jr., based on Richard Hooker'<b>s</b> novel <b>MASH</b>: A Novel \nAbout Three Army Doctors. The picture is the only theatrically released feature \nfilm in the M*A*<b>S</b>*H ... The film inspired the <b>television series</b> M*A*<b>S</b>*H, which ran \nfrom 1972 to 1983.",
"title": "MASH (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Trapper John, M.D. is an American medical drama <b>television series</b> and spin-off \nof the film <b>MASH</b> ... Her nickname Ripples <b>was</b> dropped after the <b>first</b> few \nepisodes. ... After Harrison's last episode, the <b>show was</b> off the <b>air</b> for three weeks\n, then ...",
"title": "Trapper John, M.D."
},
{
"snippet": "Hogan's Heroes is an American <b>television</b> sitcom set in a German prisoner of war \n(POW) camp during World War II. It ran for 168 episodes (six seasons) from \nSeptember 17, 1965, to April 4, 1971, on the CBS network, being the longest \nbroadcasting for an American <b>television series</b> inspired by that war. ... Hogan's \nHeroes centers on U.S. Army <b>Air</b> Forces Colonel Robert Hogan and ...",
"title": "Hogan's Heroes"
}
]
},
{
"query": "tv show mash",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "M*A*S*H is an American war comedy-drama <b>television</b> series that aired on CBS \nfrom 1972 to 1983. It was developed by Larry Gelbart, adapted from the 1970 \nfeature film M*A*S*H, which, in turn, was based on Richard Hooker's 1968 novel \n<b>MASH</b>: A Novel About Three Army Doctors. ... The <b>show</b> was created after an \nattempt to film the original book's sequel, ...",
"title": "M*A*S*H (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "M*A*S*H is an American media franchise consisting of a series of novels, a film, \nseveral ... <b>MASH</b> is a 1970 feature film adaptation of the original novel. The film ... \nIn 1973 a play by Tim Kelly, based on the book, <b>television show</b> and movie, was ...",
"title": "M*A*S*H"
},
{
"snippet": "Loretta Jane Swit (born November 4, 1937) is an American stage and <b>television</b> \nactress known ... Loretta Swit MASH 1972. ... Swit was one of only four cast \nmembers to stay for all 11 seasons of the <b>show</b>, from 1972 to 1983 (the others are \nAlan ...",
"title": "Loretta Swit"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of characters from the M*A*S*H franchise, covering the various \nfictional characters appearing in the novel <b>MASH</b>: A Novel About Three Army \nDoctors and its sequels, the 1970 film adaptation of the novel, and the <b>television</b> \nseries M*A*S*H, <b>AfterMASH</b>, W*A*L*T*E*R, and Trapper John, ... Captain B.J. \nHunnicutt is played by Mike Farrell in the <b>TV show</b>.",
"title": "List of M*A*S*H characters"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>AfterMASH</b> is an American sitcom produced as a spin-off and continuation of M*A\n*S*H that ... (The series was never picked up, and the pilot was aired in July 1984 \nas a <b>TV</b> special on CBS exclusively in the Eastern and Central timezones; the \n<b>show</b> was ... In May, CBS announced the <b>show</b> was renewed for a second \nseason.",
"title": "AfterMASH"
},
{
"snippet": ""Goodbye, Farewell and Amen" is a <b>television</b> film that served as the 256th and \nfinal episode of ... As M*A*S*H was one of the most successful <b>shows</b> in <b>TV</b> \nhistory, in order not to lose the franchise completely, CBS quickly created a new \nseries, <b>AfterMASH</b>, that followed the postwar adventures of Colonel Potter, Max \nKlinger, ...",
"title": "Goodbye, Farewell and Amen"
},
{
"snippet": "Trapper John, M.D. is an American medical drama <b>television</b> series and spin-off \nof the film <b>MASH</b> (1970). Pernell Roberts portrayed the title character, a lovable \nsurgeon who became a mentor and father figure in San Francisco, California. \nThe <b>show</b> ran on CBS for seven seasons, from September 23, 1979, ...",
"title": "Trapper John, M.D."
},
{
"snippet": "Edgar McLean Stevenson Jr. (November 14, 1927 – February 15, 1996) was an \nAmerican actor ... Afterward he worked at a radio station, played a clown on a live \n<b>TV show</b> in Dallas, ... Stevenson died one day before actor Roger Bowen, who \nportrayed Lt. Colonel Henry Blake in the 1970 movie <b>MASH</b> and also died from a\n ...",
"title": "McLean Stevenson"
},
{
"snippet": "Gary Rich Burghoff (born May 24, 1943) is an American actor who is known for \noriginating the role of Charlie Brown in the 1967 Off-Broadway musical You're a \nGood Man, Charlie Brown, and the character Corporal Walter Eugene "Radar" O'\nReilly in the film <b>MASH</b>, as well as the <b>TV</b> series. ... He was a regular on \n<b>television</b> game <b>show</b> Match Game from 1974 to 1975 ...",
"title": "Gary Burghoff"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Mash</b> Report is a British comedy on BBC Two. It satirises the news and is \nhosted by Nish Kumar. First aired on 20 July 2017, it is a <b>TV show</b> spin-off of The\n ...",
"title": "The Mash Report"
}
]
}
] |
Who plays the mom in diary of a wimpy kid long haul? | 7480707022951695552 | Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul (film) | [
"Alicia Silverstone"
] | [
"Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul (film)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Alicia Silverstone"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Alicia Silverstone"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Alicia Silverstone"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "diary of a wimpy kid long haul",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> is a 2017 American live-action/animated \nroad comedy film directed by David Bowers. It is the fourth and final installment in\n ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> is a children's novel written by Jeff Kinney \nand is the ninth book in the <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> series. On April 28, 2014, ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a children's novel written and illustrated by Jeff Kinney. It \nis the first ... The ninth book, The <b>Long Haul</b>, was released on November 4, 2014, \nin the US and November 5, 2014, in the UK. The tenth book, Old School, was ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a series of fiction books written by the American author \nand cartoonist ... The Wimpy Kid Movie Diary: The Next Chapter covers how the \nfilm The <b>Long Haul</b> was ... An unnamed pig was won by Manny in The <b>Long Haul</b>.",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (book series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> was released on May 19, 2017, and is the \nfirst film to ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (film series)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of characters in Jeff Kinney's <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> graphic novel \nseries, as well as ... in the first three films of the <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> film series. \nIn <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>, she is portrayed by Alicia Silverstone.",
"title": "List of Diary of a Wimpy Kid characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Gregory "Greg" Heffley is a fictional character and the protagonist of the realistic \nfiction novel series <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> created by American cartoonist Jeff \nKinney. ... The cast was completely changed for the fourth film <b>Diary of a Wimpy</b> \n<b>Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>, which was released on May 19, 2017 with Jason Drucker as \nGreg, ...",
"title": "Greg Heffley"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a 2010 American live-action/animated comedy film \ndirected by Thor ... sequels, <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: Rodrick Rules (2011), <b>Diary of</b> \n<b>a Wimpy Kid</b>: Dog Days (2012), and <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> (2017).",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Jeffrey Patrick Kinney (born February 19, 1971) Is an American author and \ncartoonist, best ... The <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> series has over 200 million copies in \nprint ... A fourth film, based on The <b>Long Haul</b>, was announced by Kinney via \nTwitter in ...",
"title": "Jeff Kinney"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Long Haul</b> is an autobiography of Myles Horton, labor organizer, founder of \nthe Highlander ... Jump to navigation Jump to search. This article is about the \nautobiography. For the Wimpy Kid book, see Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long \nHaul.",
"title": "The Long Haul (autobiography)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who plays the mom in diary of a wimpy kid long haul?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> is a 2017 American ... In August 2012, while \ndoing press for the film, author Jeff Kinney and <b>actors</b> Zachary Gordon and ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of <b>characters</b> in Jeff Kinney's <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> graphic novel \nseries, as well as ... based on the books, Rodrick is <b>played</b> by Devon Bostick. In \nthe film, <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>, Rodrick is <b>played</b> by Charlie \nWright.",
"title": "List of Diary of a Wimpy Kid characters"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> is a children's novel written by Jeff Kinney ... \nAs Greg Heffley's summer vacation begins, his <b>mother</b> announces that the family \n... Manny speaks perfect Spanish, having learned from a Spanish CD <b>played</b> ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a children's novel written and illustrated by Jeff Kinney. It \nis the first ... At home, Greg's <b>mother</b> forces him into auditioning for the school \n<b>play</b> (based on The Wizard of Oz). Greg lands the ... The ninth book, The <b>Long</b> \n<b>Haul</b>, was released on November 4, 2014, in the US and November 5, 2014, in \nthe UK.",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid"
},
{
"snippet": "An unnamed pig was won by Manny in The <b>Long Haul</b>. The pig displays high \nintelligence, and walks upright in a reference to Animal ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (book series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a 2010 American live-action/animated comedy film \ndirected by Thor ... <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: Dog Days (2012), and <b>Diary of a Wimpy</b> \n<b>Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> (2017). ... After Greg accidentally breaks Rowleys arm during \na game the boys <b>played</b>, ... Kaye Capron as Mrs. Jefferson, Rowley's <b>mother</b>.",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Susan Heffley (<b>mother</b>) Rodrick Heffley (older brother) Manny Heffley (younger \nbrother). Religion, Christian. Nationality, American. Gregory "Greg" Heffley is a \nfictional character and the protagonist of the realistic fiction novel series <b>Diary of</b> \n<b>a Wimpy Kid</b> created by American cartoonist Jeff Kinney. ... completely changed \nfor the fourth film <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>, ...",
"title": "Greg Heffley"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a series of films based on the series of books, <b>Diary of a</b> \n<b>Wimpy Kid</b> by ... <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> was released on May 19, \n2017, and is the first film to ... Zachary Gordon reprises his role as Greg Heffley \nalong other cast members voicing their <b>characters</b> from the films in minor roles.",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (film series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Followed by, The <b>Long Haul</b> ... Hard Luck is the eighth installment of the <b>Diary of</b> \n<b>a Wimpy Kid</b> book series. ... challenging to write for one of the book's <b>characters</b>, \nRowley's girlfriend Abigail, as she was "meant to be a placeholder for a girlfriend\n ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Hard Luck"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: Old School is a children's novel written by American ... It is \nthe tenth book of <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> series, preceded by <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: \nThe <b>Long Haul</b> and followed by <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: Double Down. ... Greg \nHeffley starts the book by talking about how his <b>mother</b> doesn't like ... <b>Characters</b>.",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Old School"
}
]
},
{
"query": "mom in diary of a wimpy kid long haul actor",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> is a 2017 American ... The film received \nnegative reviews, with many criticizing its new <b>cast</b>. ... his older brother Rodrick, \nhis father Frank, his <b>mother</b> Susan, and his younger brother Manny — plans to \ntake a ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Zachary Adam Gordon (born February 15, 1998) is an American <b>actor</b>. Beginning \nhis professional <b>acting</b> career at the age of eight, Gordon is a three-time Young \nArtist Award Best Leading Young <b>Actor</b> nominee, best known for playing Greg \nHeffley in the first three films of the <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> film series. ... In the \nfourth film, <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>, he was replaced by ...",
"title": "Zachary Gordon"
},
{
"snippet": "Jason Ian Drucker (born September 20, 2005) is an American child <b>actor</b>. He \nstarred as Greg Heffley in the 2017 film <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>.",
"title": "Jason Drucker"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of characters in Jeff Kinney's <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> graphic novel \nseries, as well as ... Rowley is also the owner of the comic strip Zoo Wee <b>Mama</b>. \n... times, <b>acting</b> like she knows what things kids Greg and Rodrick's age are into \nwhen, ... In <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>, she is portrayed by Alicia \nSilverstone.",
"title": "List of Diary of a Wimpy Kid characters"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a 2010 American live-action/animated comedy film \ndirected by Thor ... of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days (2012), and <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: \nThe <b>Long Haul</b> (2017) ... Later, Greg and his <b>mother</b> attend a <b>mother</b>-son dance \nat school despite his reluctance ... Belita Moreno as Mrs. Norton, Greg's <b>acting</b> \nteacher.",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Alicia Silverstone is an American <b>actress</b>. She made her film debut in The Crush (\n1993), ... Her father was born to a Jewish family and her <b>mother</b> converted to ... \nThe comedy The <b>Long Haul</b>, the fourth film in the <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> film series,\n ...",
"title": "Alicia Silverstone"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: Dog Days is also the last film in the series to feature the \noriginal ... and new <b>actors</b> were <b>cast</b> for the subsequent films in the series, \nstarting with <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b>, which was released five years \nlater. ... and his <b>mother</b> Susan starts a book club for all the boys in the \nneighborhood, but ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b>: The <b>Long Haul</b> was ... is the first film to feature an entirely \nnew <b>cast</b>.",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid (film series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> is a children's novel written and illustrated by Jeff Kinney. It \nis the first ... At home, Greg's <b>mother</b> forces him into auditioning for the school \nplay (based on ... Greg lands the role as a tree, while Patty Farrel is <b>cast</b> as \nDorothy, the ... The ninth book, The <b>Long Haul</b>, was released on November 4, \n2014, in the ...",
"title": "Diary of a Wimpy Kid"
},
{
"snippet": "Devon Bostick (born November 13, 1991) is a Canadian <b>actor</b> best known for \nplaying the lead role of Simon in the Atom Egoyan directed film Adoration, Brent \nin Saw VI, Rodrick Heffley in the first three <b>Diary of a Wimpy Kid</b> movies ... His \n<b>mother</b>, Stephanie Gorin, is a casting agent in Toronto, who works in stage and \nscreen, ...",
"title": "Devon Bostick"
}
]
}
] |
Who starred in our friends in the north? | 7488937357257893375 | Our Friends in the North | [
"Mark Strong",
"Gina McKee",
"Christopher Eccleston",
"Daniel Craig"
] | [
"Our Friends in the North"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Daniel Craig, Christopher Eccleston, Gina McKee and Mark Strong",
"Christopher Eccleston Gina McKee Daniel Craig Mark Strong"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "our friends in the north star",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Our Friends in the North</b> is a British television drama serial produced by the BBC. \n... "<b>Our Friends In The North</b> made a <b>star</b> of Daniel Craig but almost wasn't ...",
"title": "Our Friends in the North"
},
{
"snippet": "This is an episode list of the British drama series <b>Our Friends in the North</b>. Dates \nshown are original airdates on BBC Two.",
"title": "List of Our Friends in the North episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Daniel Wroughton Craig (born 2 March 1968) is an English actor. After training at \nthe National ... Craig has continued to <b>star</b> in other films, such as the fantasy film \nThe Golden Compass (2007), the historical ... In 1996, Craig starred in the BBC \ndrama serial <b>Our Friends in the North</b> as the troubled George 'Geordie' Peacock.",
"title": "Daniel Craig"
},
{
"snippet": "Christopher Eccleston is an English actor. The recipient of an Emmy Award and \ntwo BAFTA ... His first nomination came in 1997 for <b>Our Friends in the North</b>, but \nhe lost to Nigel Hawthorne (for The Fragile Heart). He was nominated in ... "Dr \nWho <b>star</b> Christopher Eccleston: 'Reading books should be for everyone'". This Is\n ...",
"title": "Christopher Eccleston"
},
{
"snippet": "Georgina McKee (born 14 April 1964) is an English actress. She won the 1997 \nBAFTA TV Award for Best Actress for <b>Our Friends in the North</b> (1996), and earned\n ...",
"title": "Gina McKee"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Our Friends in the North</b> is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has ... \nwas still doing time in the local open prison, and was one of its <b>star</b> inmates).",
"title": "Talk:Our Friends in the North"
},
{
"snippet": "Peter Flannery is an English playwright and screenwriter. He was educated at the \nUniversity of ... He is perhaps best known to a wider audience for his highly \nacclaimed television adaptation of <b>Our Friends in the North</b>, produced by the ... \nIain Heggie for American Bagpipes (1988); Billy Roche for A Handful of <b>Stars</b> (\n1989).",
"title": "Peter Flannery"
},
{
"snippet": "Mark Strong is an English actor. He is best known for his film roles such as Archy \nin RocknRolla ... He also had starring roles in two BBC Two drama serials, <b>Our</b> \n<b>Friends in the North</b> (1996) and The Long Firm (2004), earning a BAFTA ... "\nRobin Hood <b>star</b> Mark Strong: 'Real knights would have needed tea breaks'".",
"title": "Mark Strong"
},
{
"snippet": "Danny Webb (born 6 June 1958) is an English television and film actor. He is \nbest known for ... Webb has appeared in many British television programmes, \nincluding The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, <b>Our Friends in the North</b>, A \nTouch of ... playing Kris, a psychiatric patient who believed that he came from \nanother <b>star</b>.",
"title": "Danny Webb (actor)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>North Star</b> was a nineteenth-century anti-slavery newspaper published from \nthe Talman ... Collection, Lavery Library, St. John Fisher College (selected issues \nonly). "<b>Our</b> Paper and Its Prospects", The <b>North Star</b>, December 3, 1847.",
"title": "The North Star (anti-slavery newspaper)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "our friends in the north",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Our Friends in the North</b> is a British television drama serial produced by the BBC. \nIt was originally broadcast in nine episodes on BBC Two in early 1996. Written ...",
"title": "Our Friends in the North"
},
{
"snippet": "This is an episode list of the British drama series <b>Our Friends in the North</b>. Dates \nshown are original airdates on BBC Two.",
"title": "List of Our Friends in the North episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Our Friends in the North</b> is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has ... \nDuring the first 7 or so weeks, the BBC professed itself entirely happy with my ...",
"title": "Talk:Our Friends in the North"
},
{
"snippet": "Georgina McKee (born 14 April 1964) is an English actress. She won the 1997 \nBAFTA TV Award for Best Actress for <b>Our Friends in the North</b> (1996), and earned\n ...",
"title": "Gina McKee"
},
{
"snippet": "List of <b>Our Friends in the North</b> episodes is within the scope of WikiProject British \ntelevision. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where ...",
"title": "Talk:List of Our Friends in the North episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Peter Flannery is an English playwright and screenwriter. He was educated at the \nUniversity of ... He is perhaps best known to a wider audience for his highly \nacclaimed television adaptation of <b>Our Friends in the North</b>, produced by the BBC\n ...",
"title": "Peter Flannery"
},
{
"snippet": "Thomas Daniel Smith (11 May 1915 – 27 July 1993) was a British politician who \nwas Leader of Newcastle City Council from 1960 to 1965. He was a prominent \nfigure in the Labour Party in North East England, such ... was the inspiration for \nAustin Donohue, a character in Peter Flannery's play, <b>Our Friends in the North</b>.",
"title": "T. Dan Smith"
},
{
"snippet": "Christopher Eccleston is an English actor. The recipient of an Emmy Award and \ntwo BAFTA ... His first nomination came in 1997 for <b>Our Friends in the North</b>, but \nhe lost to Nigel Hawthorne (for The Fragile Heart). He was nominated in 2004 for\n ...",
"title": "Christopher Eccleston"
},
{
"snippet": "Mark Strong is an English actor. He is best known for his film roles such as Archy \nin RocknRolla ... He also had starring roles in two BBC Two drama serials, <b>Our</b> \n<b>Friends in the North</b> (1996) and The Long Firm (2004), earning a BAFTA ...",
"title": "Mark Strong"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Our Friends in the North</b> is a British television drama. A serial produced by the \nBBC and originally screened in nine episodes on BBC2 in early 1996, Our \nFriends ...",
"title": "Portal:Television/Selected article/26"
}
]
}
] |
Which two countries were the leading powers during the cold war? | 7538060153574508823 | Cold War | [
"Soviet Union",
"United States"
] | [
"List of modern great powers",
"Cold War"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Soviet Union and the United States"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "leading powers during the cold war",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The conclusion of World War I <b>and</b> the resulting treaties of Versailles, ... The Big \nFour were <b>leading</b> architects of the Treaty of Versailles ... <b>During the Cold War</b>, \nJapan, France, the United Kingdom ...",
"title": "Great power"
},
{
"snippet": "A superpower is a state with a dominant position characterized by its extensive \nability to exert ... For the duration of the <b>Cold War</b>, the United States <b>and</b> the \nSoviet Union dominated world affairs. At the end of ... War. It must relearn the \ngame of international politics as a <b>major power</b>, not a superpower, <b>and</b> make \ncompromises".",
"title": "Superpower"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>In</b> this context, the United States <b>and</b> the Soviet Union increasingly ... The Kremlin \nsaw continuing territorial losses by imperial <b>powers</b> as ... with a <b>major</b> threat to its \nlegitimacy beginning <b>in</b> 1956, ...",
"title": "Cold War"
},
{
"snippet": "... eventually won a <b>power</b> struggle <b>and led</b> the country ... European satellite \nstates engaged <b>in the Cold War</b>, ...",
"title": "List of modern great powers"
},
{
"snippet": "The balance of <b>power</b> theory <b>in</b> international relations suggests that states may \nsecure their ... When the <b>leading power</b> can administer conquests effectively so \nthey add to its <b>power and</b> when the system's borders are rigid, the probability ... \nThe post-<b>Cold War</b> period represents an anomaly to the balance of <b>power</b> theory \ntoo.",
"title": "Balance of power (international relations)"
},
{
"snippet": "The following outline is provided as an overview of <b>and</b> topical guide to the <b>Cold</b> \n<b>War</b>: <b>Cold War</b> – period of political <b>and</b> military tension that occurred after World \nWar II between <b>powers in</b> the Western Bloc (the United States, its NATO allies ... \nWarsaw Pact – defensive pact <b>led</b> by the Soviet Union for defence <b>in</b> Eastern ...",
"title": "Outline of the Cold War"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>In</b> international relations since the late 20th century, a regional <b>power</b> is a term \nused for a state ... world scale, willing to make use of <b>power</b> resources <b>and</b> \nrecognized or even accepted as the regional <b>leader</b> by its neighbours". ... were \nseen as <b>major</b> regional <b>powers</b> "containing" the communist regimes <b>during the</b> \n<b>Cold War</b>.",
"title": "Regional power"
},
{
"snippet": "Polarity <b>in</b> international relations is any of the various ways <b>in</b> which <b>power</b> is \ndistributed within ... The clearer <b>and</b> larger the concentration of <b>power in</b> the \n<b>leading</b> state, the more peaceful the international order associated with it will be. \n... He does not question the impossibility of great <b>power war in</b> a unipolar world, \nwhich is a ...",
"title": "Polarity (international relations)"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>major</b> breakthrough came <b>in</b> 1985–87, with the successful negotiation of the \nIntermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) ...",
"title": "Cold War (1985–1991)"
},
{
"snippet": "Canada <b>in the Cold War</b> was one of the western <b>powers</b> playing a central role <b>in</b> \nthe <b>major</b> alliances. It was an ally of the United States, but there were several ...",
"title": "Canada in the Cold War"
}
]
},
{
"query": "cold war",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Cold War</b> was a period of geopolitical tension between the Soviet Union and \nthe United States and their respective allies, the Eastern Bloc and the Western ...",
"title": "Cold War"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Cold War</b> (Polish: Zimna wojna) is a 2018 historical period drama film directed by \nPaweł Pawlikowski, who co-wrote the screenplay with Janusz Głowacki and ...",
"title": "Cold War (2018 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Second <b>Cold War</b> is a term used to describe a post-<b>Cold</b>-<b>War</b> era of political \nand military tension between opposing geopolitical power blocs, with one bloc ...",
"title": "Second Cold War"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>Cold War</b>" is the eighth episode of the seventh series of the British science fiction \ntelevision series Doctor Who. It first aired on BBC One on 13 April 2013, and ...",
"title": "Cold War (Doctor Who)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Cuban Missile Crisis, also known as the October Crisis of 1962 (Spanish: \nCrisis de ... With the end of World War II and the start of the <b>Cold War</b>, the United \nStates had grown concerned about the expansion of communism. A Latin \nAmerican ...",
"title": "Cuban Missile Crisis"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Cold War</b> period of 1985–1991 began with the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev as \nGeneral Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Gorbachev was ...",
"title": "Cold War (1985–1991)"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>cold war</b> is a state of conflict between nations that does not involve direct \nmilitary action but is pursued primarily through economic and political actions, ...",
"title": "Cold war (general term)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Cold War</b> (1979–1985) refers to a late phase of the <b>Cold War</b> marked by a \nsharp increase in hostility between the Soviet Union and the West. It arose from a\n ...",
"title": "Cold War (1979–1985)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Cold War</b> (1947–1991) is the period within the <b>Cold War</b> from the Truman \nDoctrine in 1947 to the conclusion of the Korean War in 1953. The <b>Cold War</b> ...",
"title": "Cold War (1947–1953)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Cold War</b> (1953–1962) discusses the period within the <b>Cold War</b> from the \ndeath of Soviet leader (Joseph Stalin) in 1953 to the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962\n.",
"title": "Cold War (1953–1962)"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote the music and lyrics for sound of music? | 7584571493757068995 | The Sound of Music | [
"lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II",
"music by Richard Rodgers"
] | [
"The Sound of Music",
"The Sound of Music (film)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Richard Rodgers",
"Richard Charles Rodgers"
],
"question": "Who wrote the music for The Sound of Music?|Who wrote the music for The Sound of Music ?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Oscar Greeley Clendenning Ritter von Hammerstein II",
"Oscar Greeley Clendenning Hammerstein II",
"Oscar Hammerstein II"
],
"question": "Who wrote the lyrics for The Sound of Music ?|Who wrote the lyrics for The Sound of Music?|Who wrote the lyric for The Sound of Music?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "sound of music",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Sound of Music</b> is a 1965 American musical drama film produced and \ndirected by Robert Wise, and starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer, \nwith ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Sound of Music</b> is a musical with music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Oscar \nHammerstein II, and a book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse. It is based ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Sound of Music</b> Live! is a television special that was originally broadcast by \nNBC on December 5, 2013. Produced by Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, the ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music Live!"
},
{
"snippet": "Arthur Christopher Orme Plummer CC (born December 13, 1929) is a Canadian \nactor whose career has spanned six decades, beginning with his film debut in \nStage Struck (1958). He is known for portraying Captain Georg von Trapp in The \n<b>Sound of Music</b> ...",
"title": "Christopher Plummer"
},
{
"snippet": "The soundtrack of the film The <b>Sound of Music</b> was released in 1965 by RCA \nVictor and is one of the most successful soundtrack albums in history, having sold\n ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music (soundtrack)"
},
{
"snippet": "Baroness Maria Augusta von Trapp DHS (née Kutschera; 26 January 1905 – 28 \nMarch 1987) ... The book was then adapted into The <b>Sound of Music</b>, a 1959 \nBroadway musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein, starring Mary Martin and \nTheodore ...",
"title": "Maria von Trapp"
},
{
"snippet": "Connie Fisher (born 17 June 1983) is a British actress, singer and TV presenter, \nwho won the BBC One talent contest, How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria? \nOn 15 November 2006, she opened to excellent reviews in the part of Maria von \nTrapp in The <b>Sound of Music</b> in the West End, ...",
"title": "Connie Fisher"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Sound of Music</b> club was a punk music concert venue, located at 162 Turk \nStreet in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco, California, in the 1980s.",
"title": "Sound of Music (punk club)"
},
{
"snippet": ""The <b>Sound of Music</b>" is the title song from the 1959 musical The <b>Sound of Music</b>. \nIt was composed by Richard Rodgers with lyrics written by Oscar Hammerstein ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Dame Julie Andrews, DBE is an English actress, singer and author. Andrews, a \nchild actress ... After completing The <b>Sound of Music</b>, Andrews appeared as a \nguest star on the NBC-TV variety series The Andy Williams Show. She followed \nthis ...",
"title": "Julie Andrews"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who wrote the music and lyrics for sound of music",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Sound of Music</b> is a <b>musical</b> with <b>music</b> by Richard Rodgers, <b>lyrics</b> by Oscar \nHammerstein ... The <b>musical</b> numbers listed appeared in the <b>original</b> production \nunless otherwise noted. † Sometimes replaced by "Something Good", which was\n ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Sound of Music</b> is a 1965 American <b>musical</b> drama film produced and \ndirected by Robert Wise, and starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer, \nwith Richard Haydn and Eleanor Parker. The film is an adaptation of the 1959 \nstage <b>musical</b> of the same name, <b>composed</b> by Richard Rodgers with <b>lyrics</b> ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music (film)"
},
{
"snippet": ""The <b>Sound of Music</b>" is the title song from the 1959 <b>musical</b> The <b>Sound of Music</b>. \nIt was <b>composed</b> by Richard Rodgers with <b>lyrics</b> written by Oscar Hammerstein ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Richard Charles Rodgers (June 28, 1902 – December 30, 1979) was an \nAmerican <b>composer</b>, ... Rodgers also <b>wrote</b> a melody for which Hart <b>wrote</b> three \nconsecutive <b>lyrics</b> which either were cut, not recorded or not a hit. ... After \nHammerstein's death in 1960, Rodgers <b>wrote</b> both words and <b>music</b> for his first \nnew Broadway ...",
"title": "Richard Rodgers"
},
{
"snippet": "Oscar Greeley Clendenning Ritter von Hammerstein II was an American lyricist, \nlibrettist, theatrical producer, and (usually uncredited) director in the <b>musical</b> \ntheater for almost 40 years. He won eight Tony Awards and two Academy Awards \nfor Best <b>Original</b> Song. ... After Hammerstein's death, The <b>Sound of Music</b> was \nadapted as a 1965 film, ...",
"title": "Oscar Hammerstein II"
},
{
"snippet": ""Edelweiss" is a show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein <b>musical</b> \nThe <b>Sound of</b> ... Alyson McLamore, in her book <b>Musical</b> Theater: An Appreciation, \n<b>writes</b>, "The last song to be ... The estates of Rodgers and Hammerstein have not \nauthorized the use of alternative <b>lyrics</b> with the melody of the song, making \ncertain ...",
"title": "Edelweiss (song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""My Favorite Things" is a show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein \n<b>musical</b> The <b>Sound of Music</b>. In the <b>original</b> Broadway production, this song was \nintroduced by Mary Martin ... In the <b>musical</b>, the <b>lyrics</b> to the song are a reference \nto things Maria loves, such as "whiskers on kittens, bright copper kettles and \nwarm ...",
"title": "My Favorite Things (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "The soundtrack of the film The <b>Sound of Music</b> was released in 1965 by RCA \nVictor and is one ... For the <b>original</b> Broadway show, the <b>music</b> was written by \nRichard Rodgers with <b>lyrics</b> by Oscar Hammerstein II; both the <b>lyrics</b> and <b>music</b> \nfor the new <b>songs</b> were written by Rodgers, as Hammerstein died in 1960. All \n<b>songs</b> were ...",
"title": "The Sound of Music (soundtrack)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Something Good" is a song written by Richard Rodgers for the film version of \nThe <b>Sound of Music</b>. It replaced the <b>original</b> song sung by Maria and Captain \nGeorg von Trapp ... External links[edit]. <b>Lyrics</b> of this song at MetroLyrics ...",
"title": "Something Good (Richard Rodgers song)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Composer</b>(s) · Richard Rodgers · Lyricist(s) · Oscar Hammerstein II. "Do-Re-Mi" is \na show tune from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein <b>musical</b> The <b>Sound of</b> ... \nEach syllable of the <b>musical</b> solfège system appears in the song's <b>lyrics</b>, sung on\n ...",
"title": "Do-Re-Mi"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the present defense minister of india? | 7690425622546849075 | Minister of Defence (India) | [
"Nirmala Sitharaman"
] | [
"Minister of Defence (India)",
"Nirmala Sitharaman"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Rajnath Singh"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Rajnath Singh"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Rajnath Singh"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who is the present defense minister of india?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The Minister of Defence is the head of the Ministry of Defence of the Government \nof India. ... 1947–52. Rajnath Singh is the <b>current defence minister of India</b>.",
"title": "Minister of Defence (India)"
},
{
"snippet": "Nirmala Sitharaman (born 18 August 1959) is an <b>Indian</b> politician serving as the \n<b>current Minister</b> of Finance and Corporate Affairs of <b>India</b>. She is a member of the \nRajya Sabha, upper house of the <b>Indian</b> Parliament, since 2014. Sitharaman \nformerly served as the <b>Defence Minister of India</b>, thereby ...",
"title": "Nirmala Sitharaman"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Defence</b> Secretary (IAST: Rakṣā Saciv) is the administrative head of the \n<b>Ministry</b> of <b>Defence</b>. This post is held by a senior <b>Indian</b> Administrative Service of \nthe rank of secretary to the Government of <b>India</b>. The <b>current Defence</b> Secretary is \nAjay Kumar.",
"title": "Defence Secretary of India"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Ministry</b> of <b>Defence</b> (MoD) is charged with coordinating and supervising all \nagencies and ... At <b>present</b>, the undergoing new creation of National <b>Defence</b> \nUniversity, for training of military officials and concerned civilian officials, will be ...",
"title": "Ministry of Defence (India)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Deputy Prime <b>Minister of India</b> is a member of the Union Council of <b>Ministers</b> \n<b>in</b> the ... The <b>current</b> government does not have a Deputy Prime <b>Minister</b>. On \nmultiple occasions ... (<b>Minister</b> of <b>Defence</b>), Jagjivan Ram 1991 stamp of <b>India</b>.jpg\n.",
"title": "Deputy Prime Minister of India"
},
{
"snippet": "Rajnath Singh (born 10 July 1951) is an <b>Indian</b> politician serving as the <b>Defence</b> \n<b>Minister of India</b>. He is the former President of Bharatiya Janata Party. He has ...",
"title": "Rajnath Singh"
},
{
"snippet": "The National Security Advisor is the senior official on the National Security \nCouncil of <b>India</b>, and the chief adviser to the Prime <b>Minister of India</b> on national \nsecurity policy and international affairs. Ajit Doval is the <b>current</b> NSA, and \nuniquely has the same stature as a <b>minister</b> ... the foreign secretary, home \nsecretary, finance secretary and the <b>defense</b> ...",
"title": "National Security Advisor (India)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>India</b>–United States relations, also known as <b>Indian</b>–American relations or Indo–\nAmerican ... Ambassador Henry F. Grady told then-<b>Indian</b> Prime <b>Minister</b> \nJawaharlal ... He proudly refused to beg, and thereby forfeited the chance for a \n<b>gift</b> of one ... <b>Defense</b> Secretary Robert McNamara and General Maxwell Taylor \nadvised the ...",
"title": "India–United States relations"
},
{
"snippet": "Manohar Gopalkrishna Prabhu Parrikar (13 December 1955 – 17 March 2019) \nwas an <b>Indian</b> politician and leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party who served as \nChief <b>Minister</b> of Goa from 14 March 2017 until his death. Previously, he was the \nChief <b>Minister</b> of Goa from 2000 to 2005 and from ... In November 2016, Parrikar, \nwhile serving as <b>Minister</b> of <b>Defence</b> of <b>India</b>, ...",
"title": "Manohar Parrikar"
},
{
"snippet": "Subrahmanyam Jaishankar (born 9 January 1955) is an <b>Indian</b> diplomat turned \npolitician <b>who is the current Minister</b> of External Affairs ... Jaishankar was also \ninvolved with the conclusion of the 2005 New <b>Defense</b> Framework and the Open\n ...",
"title": "Subrahmanyam Jaishankar"
}
]
},
{
"query": "defense minister india",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Minister</b> of <b>Defence</b> is the head of the <b>Ministry</b> of <b>Defence</b> of the Government \nof <b>India</b>. They are often assisted by a <b>Minister</b> of State for <b>Defence</b> and ...",
"title": "Minister of Defence (India)"
},
{
"snippet": "Nirmala Sitharaman (born 18 August 1959) is an <b>Indian</b> politician serving as the \ncurrent <b>Minister</b> of Finance and Corporate Affairs of <b>India</b>. She is a member of the \nRajya Sabha, upper house of the <b>Indian</b> Parliament, since 2014. Sitharaman \nformerly served as the <b>Defence Minister</b> of <b>India</b>, thereby ...",
"title": "Nirmala Sitharaman"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Ministry</b> of <b>Defence</b> (MoD) is charged with coordinating and supervising all \nagencies and functions of the government relating directly to national security ...",
"title": "Ministry of Defence (India)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Defence Secretary</b> (IAST: Rakṣā Saciv) is the administrative head of the \n<b>Ministry</b> of <b>Defence</b>. This post is held by a senior <b>Indian</b> Administrative Service of\n ...",
"title": "Defence Secretary of India"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>Ministry</b> of <b>Defence</b> or <b>Defense</b> (see spelling differences), also known as a \nDepartment of ... <b>India</b>, Asia, 30 November 1975, 20 December 1975, 20 days.",
"title": "List of female defence ministers"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>Defence Ministers</b> of <b>India</b>". The following 26 pages are in this \ncategory, out of 26 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:Defence Ministers of India"
},
{
"snippet": "George Mathew Fernandes (3 June 1930 – 29 January 2019) was an <b>Indian</b> \ntrade unionist, ... Fernandes served as the <b>Defence Minister</b> of <b>India</b> in both the \nsecond and third National Democratic Alliance governments (1998–2004). \nDuring his ...",
"title": "George Fernandes"
},
{
"snippet": "Vengalil Krishnan Krishna Menon (3 May 1896 – 6 October 1974) was an <b>Indian</b> \ndiplomat, ... and later as <b>Minister</b> of <b>Defence</b>, overseeing the modernization of the \n<b>Indian</b> military and development of the <b>Indian</b> military-industrial complex, and ...",
"title": "V. K. Krishna Menon"
},
{
"snippet": "Harjit Singh Sajjan, PC OMM MSM CD MP is a Canadian Liberal politician, the \ncurrent <b>Minister</b> of National <b>Defence</b> and a Member of Parliament representing \nthe riding of Vancouver South. He is Canada's first Sikh <b>Minister</b> of National \n<b>Defence</b>. ... a village in the Hoshiarpur district into a Warrior Saini family of \nPunjab, <b>India</b>.",
"title": "Harjit Sajjan"
},
{
"snippet": "Rajnath Singh (born 10 July 1951) is an <b>Indian</b> politician serving as the <b>Defence</b> \n<b>Minister</b> of <b>India</b>. He is the former President of Bharatiya Janata Party. He has ...",
"title": "Rajnath Singh"
}
]
}
] |
Who sang under the sea in little mermaid? | 7695262856059542915 | Under the Sea | [
"Samuel E. Wright"
] | [
"Under the Sea"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Samuel E. Wright"
],
"question": "Who is the singer that sings under the sea in the 1989 film little mermaid?|Who sang under the sea in the 1989 film the little mermaid?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Sebastian the crab"
],
"question": "What character sings under the sea in the 1989 film little mermaid?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Tituss Burgess"
],
"question": "Who sang under the sea in the 2007 Broadway musical version of the little mermaid?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who sang under the sea in little mermaid?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>Under the Sea</b>" is a popular <b>song</b> from Disney's 1989 animated film The <b>Little</b> \n<b>Mermaid</b>, composed by Alan Menken with lyrics by Howard Ashman and based ...",
"title": "Under the Sea"
},
{
"snippet": "Jodi Benson is an American actress, voice actress and <b>singer</b>. She is best known \nfor providing both the speaking and the singing voice of Disney's Princess Ariel in \nThe <b>Little Mermaid</b> and its sequel, prequel, ... Secret of the Wings, The <b>Little</b> \n<b>Mermaid</b>: Ariel's Beginning, The <b>Little Mermaid</b> II: Return to the <b>Sea</b>, Lady and the\n ...",
"title": "Jodi Benson"
},
{
"snippet": "The Wonderful World of Disney Presents The <b>Little Mermaid</b> Live!, or simply The \n<b>Little Mermaid</b> ... Auliʻi Cravalho as Ariel, the sixteen-<b>year</b> old mermaid princess \nof Atlantica who is obsessed with humans. ... they are silent. Guillermo Rodriguez \nfrom Jimmy Kimmel Live! has a cameo as "dat blowfish" during "<b>Under the Sea</b>".",
"title": "The Little Mermaid Live!"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Little Mermaid</b> is a 1989 American animated musical romantic fantasy film \nproduced by ... Ariel is a 16-<b>year</b>-old mermaid princess in the kingdom of \nAtlantica, in the Atlantic <b>Ocean</b>. She is ... She swims back to Atlantica and is \nwatched by two eels named Flotsam and Jetsam <b>under</b> orders from Ursula the \n<b>sea</b> witch. Ariel ...",
"title": "The Little Mermaid (1989 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Released: 1989; "<b>Under the Sea</b>" Released: December 13, 1989. Singles from \nThe <b>Little Mermaid</b>: An <b>Original</b> Walt Disney Records Soundtrack (Special Edition\n). "Kiss the Girl" Released: September 4, 2006 (Radio Disney). The <b>Little</b> \n<b>Mermaid</b>: <b>Original</b> Walt Disney Records Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the 1989\n ...",
"title": "The Little Mermaid (soundtrack)"
},
{
"snippet": "Samuel E. Wright (born November 20, 1946) is an American actor, voice actor \nand <b>singer</b>. He is best known as the voice of Sebastian in Disney's The <b>Little</b> \n<b>Mermaid</b>, for which he provided the lead vocals to "<b>Under the Sea</b>", ...",
"title": "Samuel E. Wright"
},
{
"snippet": "Disney's The <b>Little Mermaid</b>: <b>Original</b> Broadway Cast ... "<b>Under the Sea</b>", Tituss \nBurgess, Ensemble, 4:06. 14.",
"title": "The Little Mermaid (musical)"
},
{
"snippet": "Howard Elliott Ashman (May 17, 1950 – March 14, 1991) was an American \nplaywright and ... The partnership's first Disney film was The <b>Little Mermaid</b> (1989\n), followed by Beauty and the Beast (1991). ... for "Kiss The Girl" and "<b>Under The</b> \n<b>Sea</b>" with Ashman winning both awards for the latter. ... for the <b>song</b> "<b>Under the</b> \n<b>Sea</b>"",
"title": "Howard Ashman"
},
{
"snippet": "Ursula is a fictional character who appears in Walt Disney Pictures' 28th \nanimated feature film ... While the <b>original</b> sea witch is willing to help the <b>little</b> \n<b>mermaid</b> despite the fact that she openly disagrees with her ... Mermaid" was \nreleased in 1992, revolving around the adventures of Ariel living <b>under the sea</b> \nas a mermaid.",
"title": "Ursula (The Little Mermaid)"
},
{
"snippet": "He has a son named <b>Little</b> Evil who <b>Ariel</b> befriends in the episode "A <b>Little</b> Evil". ... \n<b>sea</b> dragon whom <b>Ariel</b>, Sebastian, and Flounder befriend. ... are <b>under</b> the \nmentorship of Sebastian in a scout-like troop.",
"title": "The Little Mermaid (TV series)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "under the sea in little mermaid",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>Under the Sea</b>" is a popular song from Disney's 1989 animated film The <b>Little</b> \n<b>Mermaid</b>, composed by Alan Menken with lyrics by Howard Ashman and based ...",
"title": "Under the Sea"
},
{
"snippet": "One of the new elements would be a <b>Little Mermaid</b> dark ride, much like the one \nslated for construction in California. <b>Under the Sea</b>: Journey of the Little ...",
"title": "The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Undersea Adventure"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Little Mermaid</b> is a 1989 American animated musical romantic fantasy film \nproduced by ... Disney's next film, The Rescuers Down <b>Under</b>, used a digital \nmethod of coloring and combining scanned drawings ... A direct-to-video sequel \ntitled The <b>Little Mermaid</b> II: Return to the <b>Sea</b> was released on September 19, \n2000.",
"title": "The Little Mermaid (1989 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "This article lists information of animated and was made by Hans Christian \nAndersen original ... In The <b>Little Mermaid</b> II: Return to the Sea, Ariel becomes the \nmother of ... the Genie's finger, accompanied by a few seconds of "<b>Under the Sea</b>\n".",
"title": "List of The Little Mermaid characters"
},
{
"snippet": "The Wonderful World of Disney Presents The <b>Little Mermaid</b> Live!, or simply The \n<b>Little Mermaid</b> ... In the latter's case, the common complaint was that during "\n<b>Under the Sea</b>" the audience was wearing crab claws while Shaggy did not, even\n ...",
"title": "The Little Mermaid Live!"
},
{
"snippet": "Samuel E. Wright (born November 20, 1946) is an American actor, voice actor \nand singer. He is best known as the voice of Sebastian in Disney's The <b>Little</b> \n<b>Mermaid</b>, for which he provided the lead vocals to "<b>Under the Sea</b>", ...",
"title": "Samuel E. Wright"
},
{
"snippet": "20,000 Leagues <b>Under the Sea</b>: Submarine Voyage was an attraction at the \nMagic ... However, the exterior to The <b>Little Mermaid</b>: Ariel's Undersea Adventure\n ...",
"title": "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Submarine Voyage"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Little Mermaid</b> is a stage musical produced by Disney Theatrical, based on \nthe animated ... "<b>Under the Sea</b>" is the same as the film version, but in the film it \nwas performed while Sebastian is trying to stop Ariel from daydreaming about \nEric; ...",
"title": "The Little Mermaid (musical)"
},
{
"snippet": "Disney's The <b>Little Mermaid</b> is an American animated television series produced \nby Walt ... The story is set before the events in the 1989 film, and follows Ariel's \nadventures as a mermaid still living <b>under the sea</b> with her father, Sebastian the ...",
"title": "The Little Mermaid (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Ursula is a fictional character who appears in Walt Disney Pictures' 28th \nanimated feature film ... While the original sea witch is willing to help the <b>little</b> \n<b>mermaid</b> despite the fact that she openly disagrees with her ... Mermaid" was \nreleased in 1992, revolving around the adventures of Ariel living <b>under the sea</b> \nas a mermaid.",
"title": "Ursula (The Little Mermaid)"
}
]
}
] |
Who played celie in the color purple on broadway? | 7746279457956801420 | The Color Purple (musical) | [
"Cynthia Erivo"
] | [
"The Color Purple",
"The Color Purple (disambiguation)",
"The Color Purple (musical)"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Cynthia Erivo"
],
"question": "Who played celie in the color purple on broadway from 2015 to 2017?"
},
{
"answer": [
"LaChanze",
"Rhonda LaChanze Sapp"
],
"question": "Who played celie in the color purple on broadway from 2005 to 2008?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
},
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"LaChanze",
"La Chanze Sapp-Gooding",
"Rhonda LaChanze Sapp",
"LaChanze Sapp",
"R. Lachanze Sapp"
],
"question": "Who played Celie in The Color Purple's original Broadway run?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Cynthia Onyedinmanasu Chinasaokwu Erivo",
"Cynthia Erivo"
],
"question": "Who played Celie in The Color Purple's Broadway revival?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
},
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Cynthia Erivo"
],
"question": "Who portrayed Celie in The Color Purple on Broadway?"
},
{
"answer": [
"LaChanze"
],
"question": "On Broadway, who played the part of Celie?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": " the color purple",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Color Purple</b> is a 1982 epistolary novel by American author Alice Walker \nwhich won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for ...",
"title": "The Color Purple"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Color Purple</b> is a 1985 American coming-of-age period drama film directed \nby Steven Spielberg with a screenplay by Menno Meyjes, based on the Pulitzer ...",
"title": "The Color Purple (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Color Purple</b> is a musical with a book by Marsha Norman and music and \nlyrics by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis, and Stephen Bray. Based on the 1982 \nnovel ...",
"title": "The Color Purple (musical)"
},
{
"snippet": "Alice Walker (born February 9, 1944) is an American novelist, short story writer, \npoet, and social activist. In 1982, she wrote the novel <b>The Color Purple</b>, for which\n ...",
"title": "Alice Walker"
},
{
"snippet": "Tyrian <b>purple</b> became <b>the color</b> of kings, nobles, priests <b>and</b> magistrates all \naround <b>the</b> ...",
"title": "Purple"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Color Purple</b> is a 1982 novel by Alice Walker. <b>The Color Purple</b> may also \nrefer to: <b>The Color Purple</b> (film), a 1985 film directed by Steven Spielberg, based\n ...",
"title": "The Color Purple (disambiguation)"
},
{
"snippet": "Cynthia Onyedinmanasu Chinasaokwu Erivo is an English actress, singer, and \nsongwriter. She is known for her performance as Celie in the Broadway revival of \n<b>The Color Purple</b>, for which she won the 2016 Tony Award for Best Actress ...",
"title": "Cynthia Erivo"
},
{
"snippet": "At right is displayed <b>the color purple</b>, as defined in the X11 color, which is a lot \nbrighter and bluer than the ...",
"title": "Shades of purple"
},
{
"snippet": "Akosua Gyamama Busia (born 30 December 1966) is a Ghanaian actress, film \ndirector, author and songwriter who lives in the EU. She is best known for her role \nas Nettie Harris in the 1985 film <b>The Color Purple</b> alongside Whoopi Goldberg.",
"title": "Akosua Busia"
},
{
"snippet": "Most nominations, <b>The Color Purple</b> and Out of Africa (11). TV in the United \nStates. Network, ABC. Duration, 3 hours, 11 minutes. Ratings, 37.8 million 27.3% \n(Nielsen ratings). ← 57th · Academy Awards · 59th →. The 58th Academy Awards \nceremony, organized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and ...",
"title": "58th Academy Awards"
}
]
},
{
"query": "color purple broadway",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Color Purple</b> is a <b>musical</b> with a book by Marsha Norman and music and \nlyrics by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis, and Stephen Bray. Based on the 1982 \nnovel ...",
"title": "The Color Purple (musical)"
},
{
"snippet": "Cynthia Onyedinmanasu Chinasaokwu Erivo is an English actress, singer, and \nsongwriter. She is known for her performance as Celie in the <b>Broadway</b> revival of \nThe <b>Color Purple</b>, for which ...",
"title": "Cynthia Erivo"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Color Purple</b> is a 1982 epistolary novel by American author Alice Walker \nwhich won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for \nFiction. It was later adapted into a film and <b>musical</b> of the same name.",
"title": "The Color Purple"
},
{
"snippet": "Rhonda LaChanze Sapp, known professionally as LaChanze is an American \nactress, singer, and dancer. She won the Tony Award for Best Performance by a \nLeading Actress in a <b>Musical</b> in 2006 for her role in The <b>Color Purple</b>.",
"title": "LaChanze"
},
{
"snippet": "Stephen Pate Bray is an American songwriter, drummer, and record producer. He \nis best known for his collaborations with Madonna and for winning the 2017 \nGrammy Award for the Best <b>Musical</b> Theater Album of the Tony Award-winning \nrevival of The <b>Color Purple</b>.",
"title": "Stephen Bray"
},
{
"snippet": "The Color Purple is a 1985 American coming-of-age period drama film directed \nby Steven ... See also[edit]. List of American films of 1985 · The <b>Color Purple</b> (\n<b>musical</b>), the musical theatre version of the novel.",
"title": "The Color Purple (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Notable works, The <b>Color Purple</b> (<b>musical</b>). Notable awards, Pulitzer Prize for \nDrama (1983). Spouse, Tim Dykman (1987-1996) Dann C. Byck, Jr. (1978-1986) \nMichael Norman (1969-1974). Marsha Norman (born September 21, 1947) is an \nAmerican playwright, screenwriter, and ...",
"title": "Marsha Norman"
},
{
"snippet": "Scott Sanders (born 1957) is an Emmy, Grammy, and Tony-Award winning \nAmerican television producer, film producer and theatre producer. His theatrical \n<b>musical</b> version of Alice Walker's novel The <b>Color Purple</b>, ...",
"title": "Scott Sanders (producer)"
},
{
"snippet": "Brenda Russell (née Gordon; born April 8, 1949) is an American singer-\nsongwriter and keyboardist. Russell has a diverse <b>musical</b> style which \nencompasses pop, soul, dance, ... 2005 saw a <b>Broadway musical</b> version of Alice \nWalker's The <b>Color Purple</b>. Produced by Oprah Winfrey, the show's score was \nwritten by Russell ...",
"title": "Brenda Russell"
},
{
"snippet": "Caryn Elaine Johnson (born November 13, 1955), known professionally as \nWhoopi Goldberg ... The show was retitled Whoopi Goldberg for its <b>Broadway</b> \nincarnation, ran ... The <b>Color Purple</b> was released in late 1985 and was a critical \nand ...",
"title": "Whoopi Goldberg"
}
]
},
{
"query": "celie in the color purple on broadway",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Color Purple</b> is a <b>musical</b> with a book by Marsha Norman and music and \nlyrics by Brenda ... The original <b>Broadway</b> production starred LaChanze as <b>Celie</b>, \nBrandon Victor Dixon as Harpo, Felicia P. Fields as Sofia, Renée Elise \nGoldsberry ...",
"title": "The Color Purple (musical)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Color Purple</b> is a 1982 epistolary novel by American author Alice Walker \nwhich won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for \nFiction. It was later adapted into a film and <b>musical</b> of the same name. ... <b>Celie</b> \nand her younger sister, 12-year-old Nettie, learn that a man identified only as \nMister wants ...",
"title": "The Color Purple"
},
{
"snippet": "Cynthia Onyedinmanasu Chinasaokwu Erivo is an English actress, singer, and \nsongwriter. She is known for her performance as <b>Celie</b> in the <b>Broadway</b> revival of \nThe <b>Color Purple</b>, for which ...",
"title": "Cynthia Erivo"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Color Purple</b> is a 1985 American coming-of-age period drama film directed \nby Steven ... <b>Celie</b> is transformed as she finds her self-worth through the help of \ntwo strong female companions. The film was a ... See also[edit]. List of American \nfilms of 1985 · The <b>Color Purple</b> (<b>musical</b>), the <b>musical</b> theatre version of the \nnovel.",
"title": "The Color Purple (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Rhonda LaChanze Sapp, known professionally as LaChanze is an American \nactress, singer, and dancer. She won the Tony Award for Best Performance by a \nLeading Actress in a <b>Musical</b> in 2006 for her role in The <b>Color Purple</b>. ... \nLaChanze appeared as "<b>Celie</b>" in the <b>Broadway musical</b> The <b>Color Purple</b>, from \nits opening ...",
"title": "LaChanze"
},
{
"snippet": "Fantasia Monique Barrino-Taylor (born June 30, 1984), known professionally by \nher mononym ... She then played the part of <b>Celie</b> in the <b>Broadway musical</b> The \n<b>Color Purple</b>, for which she won a 2007 Theatre World Award. Her third studio ...",
"title": "Fantasia Barrino"
},
{
"snippet": "Miss <b>Celie's</b> Blues, also known as "Sister", is a song from the Steven Spielberg \nmovie The <b>Color Purple</b> (1985), with music by Quincy Jones and Rod Temperton\n ...",
"title": "Miss Celie's Blues"
},
{
"snippet": "Stephen Pate Bray is an American songwriter, drummer, and record producer. He \nis best known for his collaborations with Madonna and for winning the 2017 \nGrammy Award for the Best <b>Musical</b> Theater Album of the Tony Award-winning \nrevival of The <b>Color Purple</b>.",
"title": "Stephen Bray"
},
{
"snippet": "Desreta Jackson (born April 19, 1971) is a Virgin Islander actress, producer and \nentrepreneur. She is best known for her role as Young <b>Celie</b> in the movie The \n<b>Color Purple</b>.",
"title": "Desreta Jackson"
},
{
"snippet": "Scott Sanders (born 1957) is an Emmy, Grammy, and Tony-Award winning \nAmerican television producer, film producer and theatre producer. His theatrical \n<b>musical</b> version of Alice Walker's novel The <b>Color Purple</b>, ... of Shug Avery, \nDanielle Brooks playing the role of Sofia, and Cynthia Erivo, reprising the role as \n<b>Celie</b>.",
"title": "Scott Sanders (producer)"
}
]
}
] |
Who scored most century in t20 international cricket? | 7784430562521478699 | List of centuries in Twenty20 International cricket | [
"Rohit Sharma",
"Colin Munro"
] | [
"Twenty20 International",
"ICC Awards",
"List of Twenty20 International records",
"List of players who have scored 10,000 or more runs in Test cricket ...",
"List of centuries in Twenty20 International cricket"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Rohit Sharma"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "t20 international",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "A Twenty20 <b>International</b> (T20I) is a form of cricket, played between two of the \n<b>international</b> members of the <b>International</b> Cricket Council (ICC), in which each \nteam faces twenty overs. The matches have top-class status and are the highest \n<b>T20</b> standard.",
"title": "Twenty20 International"
},
{
"snippet": "Twenty20 cricket or Twenty-20 (often abbreviated to <b>T20</b>), is a shortened format \nof cricket. At the ... On most <b>international</b> tours there is at least one Twenty20 \nmatch and all Test-playing nations have a domestic cup competition. West Indies \nare ...",
"title": "Twenty20"
},
{
"snippet": "This article contains records for men's Twenty20 Internationals. Lasith Malinga is \nthe leading wicket taker in <b>T20</b> Internationals, with 106 wickets.",
"title": "List of Twenty20 International records"
},
{
"snippet": "The ICC <b>T20</b> Championship is an <b>international</b> Twenty20 cricket competition run \nby the <b>International</b> Cricket Council. The competition is notional in that it is ...",
"title": "ICC T20I Championship"
},
{
"snippet": "The ICC Men's <b>T20</b> World Cup is the <b>international</b> championship of Twenty20 \n<b>International</b> cricket. Organised by cricket's governing body, the <b>International</b> ...",
"title": "ICC Men's T20 World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "Women's Twenty20 <b>International</b> (WT20I) is the shortest form of women's \n<b>international</b> cricket. A women's Twenty20 <b>International</b> is a 20 overs-per-side \ncricket ...",
"title": "Women's Twenty20 International"
},
{
"snippet": "A hat-trick in cricket is when a bowler takes three wickets from consecutive \ndeliveries. It is a ... balls in <b>T20</b> cricket, Khan achieving this feat against Ireland in \nFebruary 2019, and Malinga duplicating it against New Zealand in September \n2019.",
"title": "List of Twenty20 International cricket hat-tricks"
},
{
"snippet": "Advanced to Semifinal and 2020 ICC Men's <b>T20</b> World Cup. Advanced to Semi-\nfinal Play-offs.",
"title": "International cricket in 2019–20"
},
{
"snippet": "Separamadu Lasith Malinga is a Sri Lankan cricketer and current <b>T20</b> \n<b>international</b> captain of Sri Lanka. He captained the Sri Lankan 2014 T20 World \nCup ...",
"title": "Lasith Malinga"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of India Twenty20 <b>International</b> Cricket Records, that is records of \nteam and ... Strike Rate, Batsman, Career Runs, Balls Faced, <b>T20</b> Career Span.",
"title": "List of India Twenty20 International cricket records"
}
]
},
{
"query": "who scored most century in t20 international cricket?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "A Twenty20 <b>International</b> (<b>T20I</b>) is an <b>international cricket</b> match between two \nteams, each having <b>T20I</b> status, as determined by the <b>International Cricket</b> \nCouncil. In a <b>T20I</b>, the two teams play a single innings each, which is restricted to \na <b>maximum</b> of ... The first <b>century</b> in a <b>T20I</b> match was <b>scored</b> by Chris Gayle of \nthe West Indies ...",
"title": "List of centuries in Twenty20 International cricket"
},
{
"snippet": "This article contains records for men's Twenty20 <b>Internationals</b>. Lasith Malinga is \nthe <b>leading</b> wicket taker in <b>T20 Internationals</b>, with 106 ... (100/3) indicates that a \nteam <b>scored</b> 100 runs for three wickets and the innings was closed, ... "Records–\nTwenty20 <b>Internationals</b>–Batting records–Fastest <b>hundreds</b>–ESPN Cricinfo".",
"title": "List of Twenty20 International records"
},
{
"snippet": "This list is a compilation of total <b>centuries scored</b> by <b>international cricketers</b>, split \nbetween ... Rank, Player, Period, Teams, <b>Test</b> · <b>ODI</b> · <b>T20I</b>, Total ... 2019-11-25. ^ "\nRecords - Women's <b>Test</b> matches - Batting records - <b>Most hundreds</b> in a career ...",
"title": "List of cricketers by number of international centuries scored ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The first <b>century in Test cricket</b> was <b>scored</b> by Charles ... of the record for <b>most</b> \n<b>centuries in Test cricket</b> is Sachin Tendulkar of India, ...",
"title": "Century (cricket)"
},
{
"snippet": "Rohit Sharma has <b>scored</b> 39 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>. Rohit Sharma is an \nIndian <b>cricketer</b> who has represented the national team since 2007. He has made \n39 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>—29 in One Day <b>Internationals</b> (<b>ODI</b>), 6 in ... \nSharma set the record for <b>most centuries scored</b> in a World Cup when he <b>scored</b>\n ...",
"title": "List of international cricket centuries by Rohit Sharma"
},
{
"snippet": "Chris Gayle is a West Indian <b>cricketer</b> who captained the West Indies <b>cricket</b> team \nfrom 2007 to ... Gayle is one of four players <b>to score</b> two triple <b>centuries in Test</b> \n<b>cricket</b>. He has <b>scored centuries</b> against seven different opponents, and has \nbeen <b>most</b> successful against New Zealand and South Africa, making three \nagainst ...",
"title": "List of international cricket centuries by Chris Gayle"
},
{
"snippet": "A Twenty20 <b>International</b> (<b>T20I</b>) is a form of <b>cricket</b>, played between two of the \n<b>international</b> members of the <b>International Cricket</b> Council (<b>ICC</b>), in which each \nteam faces twenty overs. The matches have top-class status and are the <b>highest</b> \n<b>T20</b> standard. ... Chris Gayle <b>scored</b> the first <b>century</b> in a <b>T20I</b>, the achievement \nbeing reached ...",
"title": "Twenty20 International"
},
{
"snippet": "Virat Kohli has <b>scored</b> 70 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>. Virat Kohli is an Indian \n<b>cricketer</b> and the captain of the men's national team-as of November 2019. A right\n-handed top order batsman, he has made 70 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>—\n27 in <b>Test cricket</b> and 43 in ... (<b>T20I</b>) match in 2010, Kohli is yet <b>to score</b> a <b>century</b> \nin the format; his <b>highest</b> ...",
"title": "List of international cricket centuries by Virat Kohli"
},
{
"snippet": "In the sport of <b>cricket</b>, a <b>century</b> is a score of one <b>hundred</b> or more runs by a \nbatsman in a single innings. In a women's Twenty20 match, each team plays a \nsingle innings, which is restricted to a <b>maximum</b> of 20 overs. ... <b>Centuries</b> have \nbeen <b>scored</b> at fifteen different grounds, with Rwanda <b>Cricket</b> Stadium in Kigali \n<b>leading</b> the ...",
"title": "List of centuries in women's Twenty20 International cricket"
},
{
"snippet": "A double <b>century</b> (200 runs or more) in One Day <b>Internationals</b> (ODIs) has been \n<b>scored</b> on 10 occasions by 8 different batsmen/women from five of the twelve \n<b>Test-cricket</b> playing nations. ... The <b>most</b> double <b>centuries</b> by players from one \ncountry is five by India. Two double <b>centuries</b> have been <b>scored</b> in men's World \nCup ...",
"title": "List of One Day International cricket double centuries"
}
]
},
{
"query": "highest cricket scorer of all time",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Test <b>cricket</b> is played between international <b>cricket</b> teams who are Full Members \nof the ... Within a year, the equivalent batting record of <b>highest</b> run-<b>scorer</b> had \nalso ... its innings closed; (300) indicates that a team <b>scored</b> 300 runs and was <b>all</b> \nout ... the <b>time</b> he was on strike: the total <b>time</b> for his fifty is recorded as 45 \nminutes.",
"title": "List of Test cricket records"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scoring</b> over 10,000 runs across a playing career in <b>any</b> format of <b>cricket</b> is \nconsidered a significant achievement. In the chase for achieving <b>top</b> scores, West \nIndian Garfield Sobers retired as the <b>most</b> prolific run <b>scorer</b> in Test <b>cricket</b>, with a \ntotal of 8,032 runs in 1974. ... denotes that the player was at some <b>time</b> the \n<b>leading</b> run <b>scorer</b> in Tests ...",
"title": "List of players who have scored 10,000 or more runs in Test cricket ..."
},
{
"snippet": "[edit]. <b>All</b>-<b>time leading</b> run <b>scorer</b> Graham Gooch. Rank, Player, Nationality, Runs, \nAverage. 1, Graham Gooch · England ...",
"title": "List of List A cricket records"
},
{
"snippet": "72 (10 sixes and 62 fours), Brian Lara (he <b>scored</b> 501*) ... 23 sixes is also the \n<b>most ever</b> hit by a batsman in a ...",
"title": "List of first-class cricket records"
},
{
"snippet": "First <b>ever</b> ODI fifty; England lost the match ... 105, 7 September 1973, West Indies \n<b>Cricket</b> Board ... (Michael Holding <b>scored</b> 12 in a partnership of 106*).",
"title": "List of One Day International cricket records"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Scoring</b> over 10,000 runs across a playing career in any format of <b>cricket</b> is \nconsidered a significant achievement. In the chase for achieving <b>top</b> scores, West \nIndian Desmond Haynes retired ... External links[edit]. Elites of the 10,000-run \nclub, and 2015 makes <b>history</b> with hundreds at the 2015 Wisden India Almanack\n ...",
"title": "List of players who have scored 10,000 or more runs in One Day ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Brian Charles Lara, TC, OCC, AM (born 2 May 1969) is a Trinidadian former \ninternational ... He was the <b>all</b>-<b>time leading</b> run <b>scorer</b> in Test <b>cricket</b>, a record he \nattained on 26 November 2005 until surpassed by Sachin Tendulkar on 17 \nOctober ...",
"title": "Brian Lara"
},
{
"snippet": "... of runs they have <b>scored</b> divided by the number of times ... widely \nacknowledged as the greatest batsman of <b>all time</b>, ...",
"title": "List of Australia Test cricket records"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Cricket</b> World Cup is a One Day International (ODI) competition in men's \n<b>cricket</b>. Organised ... Australia hold several team records, including those for the \n<b>most</b> wins, the ... These include Canada's lowest score in the <b>history</b> of the \ntournament, ... Note : In the 2011 <b>Cricket</b> World Cup, England <b>scored</b> 338–8 in \nthe second ...",
"title": "List of Cricket World Cup records"
},
{
"snippet": "Herbert Sutcliffe has the <b>highest</b> career batting average ... the total number of \nruns they have <b>scored</b> divided by the ... Australia's Don Bradman, widely \nacknowledged as the greatest batsman of <b>all time</b>, ...",
"title": "List of England Test cricket records"
}
]
},
{
"query": "t20 international cricket best player",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>ICC</b> Awards are a set of sports awards for <b>cricket</b>. The awards recognise and \nhonor the <b>best international cricket players</b> of the ... ODI <b>Player</b> of the Year · \n<b>Twenty20 International</b> Performance of the Year; Emerging <b>Player</b> of the Year.",
"title": "ICC Awards"
},
{
"snippet": "The United States national <b>cricket</b> team is the team that represents the United \nStates in ... Therefore, all <b>Twenty20</b> matches <b>played</b> between the United States \nand other ... Even though the United States had <b>played</b> the first ever <b>international</b> \n<b>cricket</b> ... USA finished sixth in the 2001 <b>ICC</b> Trophy, their <b>best</b> performance to \ndate.",
"title": "United States national cricket team"
},
{
"snippet": "In <b>cricket</b>, a <b>player's</b> batting average is the total number of runs they have scored \ndivided by the ... Batting averages in One Day <b>International</b> (ODI) and <b>T20</b> \n<b>International</b> (T20I) ... <b>Highest</b> career batting averages in First-class <b>cricket</b> as \nfollows: ...",
"title": "Batting average (cricket)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of <b>Twenty20</b> men's <b>cricket</b> records, that is a record team or individual \nperformances in <b>Twenty20 cricket</b> (<b>T20</b>). The records only include top-level <b>T20</b> \ngames: those <b>played</b> in officially recognised tournaments in <b>ICC</b> ... The <b>highest</b> \ntarget reached without losing a wicket is 184 by Kolkata Knight Riders against ...",
"title": "List of Twenty20 cricket records"
},
{
"snippet": "The Sri Lanka national men's <b>cricket</b> team nicknamed The Lions, represents Sri \nLanka in men's <b>international cricket</b>. It is a Full Member of the <b>International</b> \n<b>Cricket</b> Council (<b>ICC</b>) with <b>Test</b>, ... ICC Rankings, Current, Best-ever ... Sri Lanka \n<b>played</b> their first <b>Twenty20 International</b> (T20I) match at the Rose Bowl, on 15 \nJune 2006 ...",
"title": "Sri Lanka national cricket team"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>Twenty20 International</b> (T20I) is a form of <b>cricket</b>, <b>played</b> between two of the \n<b>international</b> members of the <b>International Cricket</b> Council (<b>ICC</b>), in which each \nteam faces twenty overs. The matches have top-class status and are the <b>highest</b> \n<b>T20</b> standard.",
"title": "Twenty20 International"
},
{
"snippet": "The Nepal national <b>cricket</b> team nicknamed The Rhinos and Gorkhalis, \nrepresents the country of Nepal in the <b>international cricket</b> and is governed by the \n<b>Cricket</b> Association of Nepal (CAN). They have been an Associate Member of the \n<b>International Cricket</b> Council ... Therefore, all <b>Twenty20</b> matches <b>played</b> between \nNepal and other <b>ICC</b> ...",
"title": "Nepal national cricket team"
},
{
"snippet": "Christopher Henry Gayle, OD (born 21 September 1979) is a Jamaican <b>cricketer</b> \nwho plays <b>international cricket</b> for the West Indies. Gayle captained the West \nIndies <b>Test</b> side from 2007 to 2010. Considered as one of the <b>greatest</b> batsmen \never in <b>Twenty20</b> (<b>T20</b>) <b>cricket</b>, ... He is the most capped <b>player</b> for the West \nIndies in <b>international cricket</b> and is ...",
"title": "Chris Gayle"
},
{
"snippet": "The West Indies <b>cricket</b> team, nicknamed the Windies, is a multi-national men's \n<b>cricket</b> team ... The West Indies have won the <b>ICC Cricket</b> World Cup twice (1975 \nand 1979), the <b>ICC</b> World ... The number of Tests <b>played</b> at each venue followed \nby the number of One Day <b>Internationals</b> and <b>twenty20 internationals played</b> at \nthat ...",
"title": "West Indies cricket team"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Players</b>[edit]. Statistics are correct ... West Indies T20I <b>cricketers</b> ... 57, Tino <b>Best</b>, \n2013, 2014, 6, 17, 17*, —, 0, 0, 120, 6, 3/18, 25.66, 0, 0.",
"title": "List of West Indies Twenty20 International cricketers"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who scored most century in t20 international cricket?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "A Twenty20 <b>International</b> (<b>T20I</b>) is an <b>international cricket</b> match between two \nteams, each having <b>T20I</b> status, as determined by the <b>International Cricket</b> \nCouncil. In a <b>T20I</b>, the two teams play a single innings each, which is restricted to \na <b>maximum</b> of ... The first <b>century</b> in a <b>T20I</b> match was <b>scored</b> by Chris Gayle of \nthe West Indies ...",
"title": "List of centuries in Twenty20 International cricket"
},
{
"snippet": "This article contains records for men's Twenty20 <b>Internationals</b>. Lasith Malinga is \nthe <b>leading</b> wicket taker in <b>T20 Internationals</b>, with 106 ... (100/3) indicates that a \nteam <b>scored</b> 100 runs for three wickets and the innings was closed, ... "Records–\nTwenty20 <b>Internationals</b>–Batting records–Fastest <b>hundreds</b>–ESPN Cricinfo".",
"title": "List of Twenty20 International records"
},
{
"snippet": "This list is a compilation of total <b>centuries scored</b> by <b>international cricketers</b>, split \nbetween ... Rank, Player, Period, Teams, <b>Test</b> · <b>ODI</b> · <b>T20I</b>, Total ... 2019-11-25. ^ "\nRecords - Women's <b>Test</b> matches - Batting records - <b>Most hundreds</b> in a career ...",
"title": "List of cricketers by number of international centuries scored ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The first <b>century in Test cricket</b> was <b>scored</b> by Charles ... of the record for <b>most</b> \n<b>centuries in Test cricket</b> is Sachin Tendulkar of India, ...",
"title": "Century (cricket)"
},
{
"snippet": "Rohit Sharma has <b>scored</b> 39 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>. Rohit Sharma is an \nIndian <b>cricketer</b> who has represented the national team since 2007. He has made \n39 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>—29 in One Day <b>Internationals</b> (<b>ODI</b>), 6 in ... \nSharma set the record for <b>most centuries scored</b> in a World Cup when he <b>scored</b>\n ...",
"title": "List of international cricket centuries by Rohit Sharma"
},
{
"snippet": "Chris Gayle is a West Indian <b>cricketer</b> who captained the West Indies <b>cricket</b> team \nfrom 2007 to ... Gayle is one of four players <b>to score</b> two triple <b>centuries in Test</b> \n<b>cricket</b>. He has <b>scored centuries</b> against seven different opponents, and has \nbeen <b>most</b> successful against New Zealand and South Africa, making three \nagainst ...",
"title": "List of international cricket centuries by Chris Gayle"
},
{
"snippet": "A Twenty20 <b>International</b> (<b>T20I</b>) is a form of <b>cricket</b>, played between two of the \n<b>international</b> members of the <b>International Cricket</b> Council (<b>ICC</b>), in which each \nteam faces twenty overs. The matches have top-class status and are the <b>highest</b> \n<b>T20</b> standard. ... Chris Gayle <b>scored</b> the first <b>century</b> in a <b>T20I</b>, the achievement \nbeing reached ...",
"title": "Twenty20 International"
},
{
"snippet": "Virat Kohli has <b>scored</b> 70 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>. Virat Kohli is an Indian \n<b>cricketer</b> and the captain of the men's national team-as of November 2019. A right\n-handed top order batsman, he has made 70 <b>centuries</b> in <b>international cricket</b>—\n27 in <b>Test cricket</b> and 43 in ... (<b>T20I</b>) match in 2010, Kohli is yet <b>to score</b> a <b>century</b> \nin the format; his <b>highest</b> ...",
"title": "List of international cricket centuries by Virat Kohli"
},
{
"snippet": "In the sport of <b>cricket</b>, a <b>century</b> is a score of one <b>hundred</b> or more runs by a \nbatsman in a single innings. In a women's Twenty20 match, each team plays a \nsingle innings, which is restricted to a <b>maximum</b> of 20 overs. ... <b>Centuries</b> have \nbeen <b>scored</b> at fifteen different grounds, with Rwanda <b>Cricket</b> Stadium in Kigali \n<b>leading</b> the ...",
"title": "List of centuries in women's Twenty20 International cricket"
},
{
"snippet": "A double <b>century</b> (200 runs or more) in One Day <b>Internationals</b> (ODIs) has been \n<b>scored</b> on 10 occasions by 8 different batsmen/women from five of the twelve \n<b>Test-cricket</b> playing nations. ... The <b>most</b> double <b>centuries</b> by players from one \ncountry is five by India. Two double <b>centuries</b> have been <b>scored</b> in men's World \nCup ...",
"title": "List of One Day International cricket double centuries"
}
]
},
{
"query": "t20 international cricket",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Twenty20 <b>cricket</b> or Twenty-20 (often abbreviated to <b>T20</b>), is a shortened format \nof <b>cricket</b>. At the ... Matthew Hayden credited retirement from <b>international cricket</b> \nwith aiding his performance in general and fitness in particular in the Indian ...",
"title": "Twenty20"
},
{
"snippet": "A Twenty20 <b>International</b> (T20I) is a form of <b>cricket</b>, played between two of the \n<b>international</b> members of the <b>International Cricket</b> Council (<b>ICC</b>), in which each \nteam faces twenty overs. The matches have top-class status and are the highest \n<b>T20</b> standard.",
"title": "Twenty20 International"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>ICC</b> Men's <b>T20</b> World Cup is the <b>international</b> championship of Twenty20 \n<b>International cricket</b>. Organised by <b>cricket</b>'s governing body, the <b>International</b> ...",
"title": "ICC Men's T20 World Cup"
},
{
"snippet": "Advanced to Semifinal and 2020 <b>ICC</b> Men's <b>T20</b> World Cup. Advanced to Semi-\nfinal Play-offs.",
"title": "International cricket in 2019–20"
},
{
"snippet": "This article contains records for men's Twenty20 Internationals. Lasith Malinga is \nthe leading wicket taker in <b>T20</b> Internationals, with 106 ... Individual records (\nbowling)[edit]. See also: List of five-wicket hauls in Twenty20 <b>International cricket</b>\n ...",
"title": "List of Twenty20 International records"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of Twenty20 men's <b>cricket</b> records, that is a record team or individual \nperformances in Twenty20 <b>cricket</b> (<b>T20</b>). The records only include top-level <b>T20</b> \ngames: those played in officially recognised tournaments in <b>ICC</b> ...",
"title": "List of Twenty20 cricket records"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2018 <b>ICC</b> Women's World Twenty20 was hosted in the West Indies from 9 to \n24 November 2018, during the 2018–19 <b>international cricket</b> season. It was the \nsixth edition of the <b>ICC</b> Women's <b>T20</b> World Cup, and the second ... The \ntournament was awarded to the West Indies <b>Cricket</b> Board (WICB) at the 2013 \nannual ...",
"title": "2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20"
},
{
"snippet": "Women's Twenty20 <b>International</b> (WT20I) is the shortest form of women's \n<b>international cricket</b>. A women's Twenty20 <b>International</b> is a 20 overs-per-side \n<b>cricket</b> ...",
"title": "Women's Twenty20 International"
},
{
"snippet": "A hat-trick in <b>cricket</b> is when a bowler takes three wickets from consecutive \ndeliveries. It is a ... balls in <b>T20 cricket</b>, Khan achieving this feat against Ireland in \nFebruary 2019, and Malinga duplicating it against New Zealand in September \n2019.",
"title": "List of Twenty20 International cricket hat-tricks"
},
{
"snippet": "Separamadu Lasith Malinga is a Sri Lankan <b>cricketer</b> and current <b>T20</b> \n<b>international</b> captain of Sri Lanka. He captained the Sri Lankan 2014 <b>T20</b> World \nCup ...",
"title": "Lasith Malinga"
}
]
}
] |
Where was the original flamingo hotel located in las vegas? | 7879122305732499490 | Flamingo Las Vegas | [
"3555 South Las Vegas Boulevard"
] | [
"List of Las Vegas Strip hotels",
"Las Vegas Strip",
"Flamingo Las Vegas"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"3555 South Las Vegas Boulevard",
"U.S. Route 91",
"1 mile south of Hotel Last Frontier",
"Las Vegas Strip in Paradise"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "flamingo hotel located in las vegas",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Flamingo Las Vegas is</b> a <b>hotel</b> and casino <b>located</b> on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip in \nParadise, Nevada.",
"title": "Flamingo Las Vegas"
},
{
"snippet": "The following <b>is</b> a list of <b>hotels located</b> on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip. Contents. 1 List of \n<b>hotels</b>; 2 See also; 3 References; 4 External links. List of <b>hotels</b>[edit]. Current \n<b>hotels</b> on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip. Name, Image, Rooms, Opened, Operator, Theme, \nNotes. <b>Flamingo</b> 3555 <b>Las Vegas</b> Boulevard South, <b>Flamingohotelyay</b>.jpg ...",
"title": "List of Las Vegas Strip hotels"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip <b>is</b> a stretch of South <b>Las Vegas</b> Boulevard in Clark County, \nNevada that <b>is</b> ... Many of the largest <b>hotel</b>, casino, and <b>resort</b> properties in the \nworld <b>are located</b> on the Strip, known for its ... have been built on <b>Las Vegas</b> \nBoulevard at the <b>Flamingo</b> Road intersection connecting Bellagio, Caesars \nPalace, ...",
"title": "Las Vegas Strip"
},
{
"snippet": "The Linq <b>is</b> a 2,640-room <b>hotel</b>, casino and shopping promenade on the <b>Las</b> \n<b>Vegas</b> Strip in ... The motel was built directly north of the <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> and \nCasino, where Capri was an employee. The motel began construction in May \n1959, with ...",
"title": "The Linq"
},
{
"snippet": "This <b>is</b> an incomplete list of films shot in the <b>Las Vegas</b> Valley in the U.S. state of \nNevada. ... 1996, <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip, The Landmark <b>Hotel</b> and Casino. Swingers, \n1996, Stardust <b>Resort</b> and Casino, Fremont <b>Hotel</b> and Casino. Wedding Bell \nBlues, 1996.",
"title": "List of films shot in Las Vegas"
},
{
"snippet": "State Route 592 (SR 592) <b>is a</b> 8.487-mile-long (13.659 km) east–west highway \nsection line ... with control given to Clark County; however, only the above section \n<b>located</b> in the <b>resort</b> corridor has been relinquished as of January 2008.",
"title": "Flamingo Road (Las Vegas)"
},
{
"snippet": "Sam's Town <b>Las Vegas is</b> a <b>hotel</b> and casino <b>located</b> in Sunrise Manor, Nevada \non the corner of <b>Flamingo</b> Road and Boulder Highway. It <b>is</b> one of the casinos ...",
"title": "Sam's Town Hotel and Gambling Hall, Las Vegas"
},
{
"snippet": "Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel (February 28, 1906 – June 20, 1947) was an American \nmobster. ... Siegel traveled to <b>Las Vegas</b>, Nevada, where he handled and \nfinanced some of the original casinos. He assisted developer William R. \nWilkerson's <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> after Wilkerson ran out of funds. Siegel took over the \nproject and ...",
"title": "Bugsy Siegel"
},
{
"snippet": "On May 19, 2006, the <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> and Casino in <b>Las Vegas</b> announced that \nBraxton ... This set list <b>is</b> representative of the performance on August 3, 2006.",
"title": "Toni Braxton: Revealed"
},
{
"snippet": "O'Sheas Casino <b>is</b> a casino <b>located</b> within The Linq, a <b>hotel</b>-casino and shopping \npromenade on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip in Paradise, Nevada. O'Sheas originally \nopened in 1989 and operated in between the Imperial Palace <b>Hotel</b> and Casino (\nlater The Linq) and the <b>Flamingo Las Vegas</b>.",
"title": "O'Sheas Casino"
}
]
},
{
"query": "flamingo hotel original location",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Flamingo</b> Las Vegas is a <b>hotel</b> and casino <b>located</b> on the Las Vegas Strip in \nParadise, Nevada. ... The last of the <b>original Flamingo Hotel</b> structure was torn \ndown on December 14, 1993, and the <b>hotel's</b> garden was built on-site. The \n<b>Flamingo's</b> ...",
"title": "Flamingo Las Vegas"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> overlooked Biscayne Bay on the west side of the newly \nformed city of Miami Beach, Florida, until the 1950s, when it was torn down to \nmake room for the new Morton Towers development, which is now known as the \n<b>Flamingo</b> South Beach. <b>History</b>[edit].",
"title": "Flamingo Hotel, Miami Beach"
},
{
"snippet": "Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel (February 28, 1906 – June 20, 1947) was an American \nmobster. ... He assisted developer William R. Wilkerson's <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> after \nWilkerson ran out of ... Although time was running out, at age 41, Siegel had \ncarved out a name for himself in the annals of organized crime and in Las Vegas \n<b>history</b>.",
"title": "Bugsy Siegel"
},
{
"snippet": "The Aquarius Casino Resort is a <b>hotel</b> and casino <b>located</b> on the banks of the \nColorado River in Laughlin, Nevada. It is owned and operated by Golden \nEntertainment and is the largest <b>hotel</b> in Laughlin. Contents. 1 Facilities; 2 <b>History</b> \n... In October 2000, the <b>hotel's</b> name was changed to the <b>Flamingo</b> Laughlin.",
"title": "Aquarius Casino Resort"
},
{
"snippet": "The Linq is a 2,640-room <b>hotel</b>, casino and shopping promenade on the Las \nVegas Strip in ... The <b>original Flamingo</b> agreed to provide <b>hotel</b> services to guests \nat the Capri. Ralph Engelstad ... During the 1980s, the resort served as the \nstarting and finishing <b>location</b> of the annual Imperial Palace Antique Auto Run. In \n1984, a ...",
"title": "The Linq"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Hotel</b> Habana Riviera by Iberostar, originally known as the Havana Riviera, \nis a historic resort <b>hotel located</b> on ... <b>Original</b> blueprints of the <b>hotel</b> were made in \nMiami by the Feldman Construction Corporation, as well ... His main occupation \nwas operating the <b>Flamingo</b>, a post he held between 1955 and 1960; nine years\n ...",
"title": "Hotel Habana Riviera"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of <b>hotels located</b> on the Las Vegas Strip. Contents. 1 List of \n<b>hotels</b>; 2 See also; 3 References; 4 External links. List of <b>hotels</b>[edit]. Current \n<b>hotels</b> on the Las Vegas Strip. Name, Image, Rooms, Opened, Operator, Theme, \nNotes. <b>Flamingo</b> 3555 Las Vegas Boulevard South, <b>Flamingohotelyay</b>.jpg ... The \nlast of the <b>original</b> 1946 buildings was destroyed in 1993.",
"title": "List of Las Vegas Strip hotels"
},
{
"snippet": "The Montage Reno is a high-rise residential building in Reno, Nevada. The \nbuilding was ... 1 <b>History</b>. 1.1 Sahara Reno (1978–1981); 1.2 Reno Hilton (1981–\n1992) ... In 2000, Hilton declined to renew its licensing agreement with the \n<b>Flamingo</b> ... The 602 room <b>hotel</b>-casino made a profit until its corporate owner \nPark <b>Place</b> ...",
"title": "The Montage Reno"
},
{
"snippet": "O'Sheas Casino is a casino <b>located</b> within The Linq, a <b>hotel</b>-casino and shopping \npromenade on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. O'Sheas originally \nopened in 1989 and operated in between the Imperial Palace <b>Hotel</b> and Casino (\nlater The Linq) and the <b>Flamingo</b> Las ... 1 <b>History</b>. 1.1 Relocation. 2 Casino; 3 \nGallery; 4 References; 5 External links ...",
"title": "O'Sheas Casino"
},
{
"snippet": "Virginia Hill was an American organized crime figure. An Alabama native, Hill \nbecame a ... The "Flamingo" name was given to the project at its inception by \noriginal resort ... "The Fabulous <b>Flamingo Hotel History</b> - The Wilkerson-Siegel \nYears".",
"title": "Virginia Hill"
}
]
},
{
"query": "original flamingo hotel lo",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Flamingo Las Vegas</b> is a <b>hotel</b> and casino located on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip in \nParadise, Nevada. ... The last of the <b>original Flamingo Hotel</b> structure was torn \ndown on December 14, 1993, and the <b>hotel's</b> garden was built on-site. ... Hard-\nBoiled Hollywood: Crime and Punishment in Postwar <b>Los</b> Angeles. University of \nCalifornia ...",
"title": "Flamingo Las Vegas"
},
{
"snippet": "Benjamin "<b>Bugsy</b>" Siegel (February 28, 1906 – June 20, 1947) was an American \nmobster. ... He assisted developer William R. Wilkerson's <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> after \nWilkerson ran out of funds. Siegel took over the project ... Once in <b>Los</b> Angeles, \nSiegel recruited gang boss Mickey Cohen as his chief lieutenant. Knowing \nSiegel's ...",
"title": "Bugsy Siegel"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> overlooked Biscayne Bay on the west side of the newly \nformed city of Miami Beach, Florida, until the 1950s, when it was torn down to \nmake room for the new Morton Towers development, which is now known as the \n<b>Flamingo</b> South Beach. <b>History</b>[edit].",
"title": "Flamingo Hotel, Miami Beach"
},
{
"snippet": "David Berman (1903–1957), was an American organized crime figure in Iowa, \nNew York City, Minneapolis, and <b>Las Vegas</b>. He was one of the pioneers of \ngambling in <b>Las Vegas</b>, where he was a partner with flamboyant mobster <b>Bugsy</b> \nSiegel at the <b>Flamingo Hotel</b>.",
"title": "David Berman (mobster)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Linq is a 2,640-room <b>hotel</b>, casino and shopping promenade on the <b>Las</b> \n<b>Vegas</b> Strip in ... The <b>original Flamingo</b> agreed to provide <b>hotel</b> services to guests \nat the Capri. Ralph Engelstad purchased ... <b>Los</b> Angeles Times. 3 January 1983.",
"title": "The Linq"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Hotel</b> Habana Riviera by Iberostar, originally known as the Havana Riviera, \nis a historic ... <b>Original</b> blueprints of the <b>hotel</b> were made in Miami by the Feldman \n... then hired Albert B. Parvin of <b>Los</b> Angeles to design the <b>hotel's original</b> decor. \n... His main occupation was operating the <b>Flamingo</b>, a post he held between \n1955 ...",
"title": "Hotel Habana Riviera"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of <b>hotels</b> located on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip. Contents. 1 List of \n<b>hotels</b>; 2 See also; 3 References; 4 External links. List of <b>hotels</b>[edit]. Current \n<b>hotels</b> on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip. Name, Image, Rooms, Opened, Operator, Theme, \nNotes. <b>Flamingo</b> 3555 <b>Las Vegas</b> Boulevard South, <b>Flamingohotelyay</b>.jpg ... The \nlast of the <b>original</b> 1946 buildings was destroyed in 1993.",
"title": "List of Las Vegas Strip hotels"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Bugsy</b> is a 1991 American biographical crime drama film directed by Barry \nLevinson which tells ... <b>Bugsy</b> is visited in <b>Los</b> Angeles by former associate Harry \nGreenberg. ... The film has Siegel being arrested for the murder of Harry \nGreenberg while in <b>Las Vegas</b> as construction of the <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> was \nunderway, then ...",
"title": "Bugsy"
},
{
"snippet": "Meyer Harris "Mickey" Cohen (September 4, 1913 – July 29, 1976) was an \nAmerican gangster ... In 1929, the 15-year-<b>old</b> moved from <b>Los</b> Angeles to \nCleveland, Ohio, to train as a professional boxer. His first ... During their \nassociation, Cohen helped set up the <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> in <b>Las Vegas</b> and ran its \nsports book operation.",
"title": "Mickey Cohen"
},
{
"snippet": "Virginia Hill was an American organized crime figure. An Alabama native, Hill \nbecame a Chicago outfit courier during the mid-1930s. Hill was famous for being \nthe girlfriend of mobster <b>Bugsy</b> Siegel. ... Lore has it that Siegel named the \n<b>Flamingo Las Vegas</b> resort after Hill, who loved to gamble and ... NBC <b>Los</b> \nAngeles.",
"title": "Virginia Hill"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Where was the original flamingo hotel located in las vegas?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Flamingo Las Vegas is</b> a <b>hotel</b> and casino <b>located</b> on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip in \nParadise, Nevada. ... <b>Bugsy's original Flamingo Las Vegas</b> in 1947. In late 1945, \nmobster <b>Bugsy</b> Siegel and his partners came to <b>Las Vegas</b>. Vegas reportedly \npiqued ...",
"title": "Flamingo Las Vegas"
},
{
"snippet": "The following <b>is</b> a list of <b>hotels located</b> on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip. Contents. 1 List of \n<b>hotels</b>; 2 See also; 3 References; 4 External links. List of <b>hotels</b>[edit]. Current \n<b>hotels</b> on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip. Name, Image, Rooms, Opened, Operator, Theme, \nNotes. <b>Flamingo</b> 3555 <b>Las Vegas</b> Boulevard South, <b>Flamingohotelyay</b>.jpg ... The \nlast of the <b>original</b> 1946 buildings was destroyed in 1993.",
"title": "List of Las Vegas Strip hotels"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip <b>is</b> a stretch of South <b>Las Vegas</b> Boulevard in Clark County, \nNevada that <b>is</b> ... Many of the largest <b>hotel</b>, casino, and resort properties in the \nworld <b>are</b> ... On November 21, 1980, the MGM Grand suffered the worst resort fire \nin the <b>history</b> of <b>Las Vegas</b> as a result of electrical problems, killing 87 people.",
"title": "Las Vegas Strip"
},
{
"snippet": "Benjamin "<b>Bugsy</b>" Siegel (February 28, 1906 – June 20, 1947) was an American \nmobster. ... Siegel traveled to <b>Las Vegas</b>, Nevada, where he handled and \nfinanced some of the <b>original</b> casinos. He assisted developer William R. \nWilkerson's <b>Flamingo Hotel</b> after Wilkerson ran out of funds. Siegel took over the \nproject and ...",
"title": "Bugsy Siegel"
},
{
"snippet": "The Linq <b>is</b> a 2,640-room <b>hotel</b>, casino and shopping promenade on the <b>Las</b> \n<b>Vegas</b> Strip in ... The <b>Flamingo</b> Capri opened in 1959. The <b>original Flamingo</b> \nagreed to provide <b>hotel</b> services to guests at the Capri. Ralph Engelstad \npurchased the ...",
"title": "The Linq"
},
{
"snippet": "O'Sheas Casino <b>is</b> a casino <b>located</b> within The Linq, a <b>hotel</b>-casino and shopping \npromenade on the <b>Las Vegas</b> Strip in Paradise, Nevada. O'Sheas originally \nopened in 1989 and operated in between the Imperial Palace <b>Hotel</b> and Casino (\nlater The Linq) and the <b>Flamingo Las Vegas</b>. ... <b>Owner</b> Caesars Entertainment \nCorporation announced in August 2011 that ...",
"title": "O'Sheas Casino"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Flamingo</b> Road and <b>Hotel</b> Rio Drive intersection in 2012 ... The segment between \nI-15 and <b>Las Vegas</b> Boulevard remained named ... The route <b>is</b> a candidate to be \ndecommissioned with control given to Clark County; ...",
"title": "Flamingo Road (Las Vegas)"
},
{
"snippet": "El Cortez, a <b>hotel</b> and casino, <b>is</b> a relatively small downtown <b>Las Vegas</b> gaming \nvenue a block ... Gaughan, a casino <b>owner</b> and operator since the early 1950s, \nlived in El Cortez's tower penthouse ... 56; ^ "<b>Bugsy</b> Siegel opens <b>Flamingo Hotel</b>\n".",
"title": "El Cortez (Las Vegas)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Owner</b>, Boyd Gaming. Renovated in, 2000, 2007. Website, Official website. Sam's \nTown <b>Las Vegas is</b> a <b>hotel</b> and casino <b>located</b> in Sunrise Manor, Nevada on the \ncorner of <b>Flamingo</b> ...",
"title": "Sam's Town Hotel and Gambling Hall, Las Vegas"
},
{
"snippet": "Freedman's idea was to build the best <b>hotel</b> and casino in <b>Las Vegas</b> to ... of the \n<b>Flamingo Hotel</b> after the murder of <b>Bugsy</b> Siegel in 1947, and ... Taylor, and quite \nsuitable to the hot desert <b>location</b> of <b>Las Vegas</b>.",
"title": "Sands Hotel and Casino"
}
]
}
] |
What has been on longer wheel of fortune or jeopardy? | 8035414829142100267 | Wheel of Fortune (U.S. game show) | [
"Jeopardy !"
] | [
"Jeopardy! broadcast information",
"Jeopardy!",
"Wheel of Fortune (1952 game show)",
"Wheel of Fortune (American game show)"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Jeopardy",
"Jeopardy !"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "jeopardy start date",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Jeopardy</b>! is an American television game show created by Merv Griffin. The \nshow features a quiz competition in which contestants are presented with general\n ...",
"title": "Jeopardy!"
},
{
"snippet": "George Alexander Trebek OC is a Canadian-American television personality, \ngame show host and actor. He has been the host of the syndicated game show \n<b>Jeopardy</b>! since its revival ... <b>Starting</b> in spring 1969, Trebek also hosted Strategy, \na weekday afternoon game show. In 1973, he moved to the United States and ...",
"title": "Alex Trebek"
},
{
"snippet": "Arthur Fleming Fazzin (May 1, 1924 – April 25, 1995) was an American actor and \ntelevision ... The show was <b>Jeopardy</b>!, which Fleming hosted from March 30, \n1964, to January 3, 1975, and again from October 2, 1978, to March 2, 1979.",
"title": "Art Fleming"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Jeopardy</b>! The Greatest of All Time was a primetime <b>Jeopardy</b>! tournament \nfeaturing the three highest-earning contestants, Ken Jennings, Brad Rutter, and ...",
"title": "Jeopardy! The Greatest of All Time"
},
{
"snippet": "James Holzhauer (born c. 1984/1985) is an American game show contestant and \nprofessional sports gambler. He is the third-highest-earning American game \nshow contestant of all time and is best known for his 32-game winning streak as \nchampion on the quiz show <b>Jeopardy</b>! from ... references to important <b>dates</b> in his \nlife with his <b>Jeopardy</b>! wagers, including ...",
"title": "James Holzhauer"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Jeopardy</b>! is a game show based on the US version of the same name. It was \noriginally aired ... Series, <b>Start date</b>, End <b>date</b>, Episodes. 1, 12 January 1983 ...",
"title": "Jeopardy! (British game show)"
},
{
"snippet": "Celebrity <b>Jeopardy</b>! is a series of sketches that aired regularly on the television \ncomedy/variety show Saturday Night Live between 1996 and 2002, the years ...",
"title": "Celebrity Jeopardy! (Saturday Night Live)"
},
{
"snippet": "Watson is a question-answering computer system capable of answering \nquestions posed in ... The <b>Jeopardy</b>! staff used different means to notify Watson \nand the human players when to buzz, which was critical in many rounds. ... \nAccording to IBM, "The goal is to have computers <b>start</b> to interact in natural \nhuman terms across ...",
"title": "Watson (computer)"
},
{
"snippet": "Kenneth Wayne Jennings III (born May 23, 1974) is an American game show \ncontestant and ... In 2004, Jennings won 74 consecutive <b>Jeopardy</b>! games before \nhe was defeated by challenger Nancy Zerg on his 75th appearance. ... by having \nJennings make a guest appearance at the <b>start</b> of the broadcast, during which \nhost ...",
"title": "Ken Jennings"
},
{
"snippet": "Rock & Roll <b>Jeopardy</b>! was an American television game show created by Scott \nSternberg and adapted from the quiz show <b>Jeopardy</b>!. The show debuted on ...",
"title": "Rock & Roll Jeopardy!"
}
]
},
{
"query": "wheel of fortune start date",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Wheel of Fortune</b> is an American television game show created by Merv Griffin \nthat debuted in ... Play proceeds clockwise, <b>starting</b> with the contestant who was \nin control at the time of the final spin, until the puzzle is solved. ... The production \ncompany and copyright holder of all episodes to <b>date</b> is Califon Productions, Inc.,\n ...",
"title": "Wheel of Fortune (American game show)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wheel of Fortune</b> is a British television game show created by Reg Grundy and \nbased on the ... Instead, at the <b>start</b> of each round, the contestants would be \nasked a general knowledge question ... Series, <b>Start date</b>, End <b>date</b>, Episodes, \nHost.",
"title": "Wheel of Fortune (British game show)"
},
{
"snippet": "Vanna Marie White is an American television personality and film actress known \nas the hostess ... After <b>Wheel of Fortune</b> hostess Susan Stafford left in October \n1982, White was ... On November 8, 2019, Sony Pictures Television announced \nthat White will take over hosting <b>Wheel of Fortune</b> as emcee <b>starting</b> with the \nweek of ...",
"title": "Vanna White"
},
{
"snippet": "Pat Sajak is an American television personality, former weatherman, and talk \nshow host, best known as the host of the American television game show <b>Wheel</b> \n<b>of Fortune</b>. ... Also in the early 1970s, Sajak <b>began</b> DJ'ing at 50,000-watt WSM in \nNashville; at the time WSM was playing pop music during the day, and he was \nthe ...",
"title": "Pat Sajak"
},
{
"snippet": "Jeopardy! is an American television game show created by Merv Griffin. The \nshow features a ... This was changed at the <b>start</b> of Trebek's hosting run to avoid \nthe problem of contestants who would stop participating in ... to Harry Friedman \nas the executive producer of both Jeopardy! and its sister program, <b>Wheel of</b> \n<b>Fortune</b>.",
"title": "Jeopardy!"
},
{
"snippet": "George Alexander Trebek OC is a Canadian-American television personality, \ngame show host ... <b>Starting</b> in spring 1969, Trebek also hosted Strategy, a \nweekday afternoon game show. In 1973 ... Pat Sajak hosted Jeopardy! and Alex \nTrebek hosted <b>Wheel of Fortune</b> with Sajak's wife, Lesly, as Trebek's co-host. \nSajak and ...",
"title": "Alex Trebek"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wheel of Fortune</b> is an American television game show created by Merv Griffin, \npremiering in ... Retrieved December 15, 2013. ^ "Press <b>Start</b>". Electronic Gaming\n ...",
"title": "Wheel of Fortune video games"
},
{
"snippet": "In medieval and ancient philosophy the <b>Wheel of Fortune</b>, or Rota Fortunae, is a \nsymbol of the ... Warrior Princess, Xena spins the <b>wheel of fortune</b> at the <b>start</b> of \nher journey through Illusia, a mystical land where the main characters Xena and\n ...",
"title": "Rota Fortunae"
},
{
"snippet": "Mervyn Edward Griffin Jr. (July 6, 1925 – August 12, 2007) was an American \ntelevision host and media mogul. He <b>began</b> his career as a radio and big band \nsinger who went on to appear in ... Griffin produced the show's successor, <b>Wheel</b> \n<b>of Fortune</b>, which premiered on January 6, 1975. Wheel, with Chuck Woolery as \nhost ...",
"title": "Merv Griffin"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wheel of Fortune</b> was an American game show which ran from 1952 to 1953 on \nCBS in both daytime (October 3, 1952 – December 25, 1953) and nighttime ...",
"title": "Wheel of Fortune (1952 game show)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "What has been on longer wheel of fortune or jeopardy?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Wheel of Fortune</b> is an American television game show created by Merv Griffin \nthat debuted in ... The syndicated version <b>has been</b> hosted continuously by Sajak \nand White since its ... of Fortune just as the original version of <b>Jeopardy</b>!, another \nshow he had ... During these two <b>extended</b> absences, former Miss USA Summer\n ...",
"title": "Wheel of Fortune (American game show)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Jeopardy</b>! is an American television quiz show created by Merv Griffin, in which \ncontestants are presented with trivia clues in the form of answers and must \nphrase their responses in the form of a question. The show has experienced a \nlong life in several incarnations over the course ... Although <b>Wheel had been</b> a \nratings winner for WCBS, the station (whose ...",
"title": "Jeopardy! broadcast information"
},
{
"snippet": "George Alexander Trebek OC is a Canadian-American television personality. He \n<b>has been</b> the host of the syndicated game show <b>Jeopardy</b>! since its revival ... Pat \nSajak hosted <b>Jeopardy</b>! and Alex Trebek hosted <b>Wheel of Fortune</b> with Sajak's ... \na point when they (fans and producers) will no <b>longer</b> be able to say, 'It's okay.",
"title": "Alex Trebek"
},
{
"snippet": "Vanna Marie White is an American television personality and film actress known \nas the hostess of <b>Wheel of Fortune</b> since ... In 1988, she <b>appeared</b> in the NBC \ntelevision film Goddess of Love, in which she played Venus; Betsy ... She <b>had</b> lost \ninterest in the hobby over time until, on the <b>Wheel of Fortune</b> set, she noticed her\n ...",
"title": "Vanna White"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wheel of Fortune</b> was an American game show which ran from 1952 to 1953 on \nCBS in both ... The Million Dollar Wedge concept <b>has been</b> carried over to the \noriginal American version since its 26th season debut in the same year.",
"title": "Wheel of Fortune (1952 game show)"
},
{
"snippet": "Pat Sajak is an American television personality, former weatherman, and talk \nshow host, best known as the host of the American television game show <b>Wheel</b> \n<b>of Fortune</b>. ... In return, Sajak hosted a regular episode of <b>Jeopardy</b>! in place of \nTrebek. ... Sajak <b>has</b> also <b>appeared</b> on episodes of ESPN radio's The Dan Le \nBatard ...",
"title": "Pat Sajak"
},
{
"snippet": "Family Feud (or simply "The Feud") is an American television game show created \nby Mark Goodson where two families compete to name the most popular \nresponses to survey questions in order to win cash and prizes. It first aired on \nJuly 12, 1976 on ABC, and has also aired on CBS and in ... The goal of 300 \npoints <b>has been</b> in place in the rules of almost every version ...",
"title": "Family Feud"
},
{
"snippet": "The Price Is Right is an American television game show created by Bob Stewart, \nMark Goodson ... Some <b>longer</b>-tenured Barker's Beauties included Kathleen \nBradley ... Since 1988, the minimum age for audience members <b>has been</b> 18; \nprior to ... of the day, such as the runaway success of the syndicated <b>Wheel of</b> \n<b>Fortune</b>.",
"title": "The Price Is Right (American game show)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of the longest-running United States television series, ordered by \nnumber of years the show <b>has been</b> aired ... 55 years, 47, <b>Jeopardy</b>! ... 45 years, \n35, <b>Wheel of Fortune</b>, Syndicated, September 19, 1983, present, 6,000+ ... Night \nran for <b>longer</b> overall, the first 5 years of the program were only locally broadcast;\n ...",
"title": "List of longest-running United States television series"
},
{
"snippet": "Celebrity <b>Jeopardy</b>! is a series of sketches that aired regularly on the television \ncomedy/variety ... On several occasions, Celebrity <b>Jeopardy</b>! sketches have <b>been</b> \nreferenced during actual episodes of <b>Jeopardy</b>! ... to do with the game, frustrating \nTrebek, who <b>does</b> nothing to hide his contempt for the celebrities' performance.",
"title": "Celebrity Jeopardy! (Saturday Night Live)"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote the monkees song i'm a believer? | 8112562675843440149 | I'm a Believer | [
"Neil Diamond"
] | [
"I'm a Believer"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Neil Diamond"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Neil Diamond"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Neil Diamond"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who wrote the monkees song i'm a believer?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>I'm a Believer</b>" is a <b>song composed</b> by Neil Diamond and recorded by <b>The</b> \n<b>Monkees</b> in 1966 with the lead vocals by Micky Dolenz. The single, produced by \nJeff ...",
"title": "I'm a Believer"
},
{
"snippet": ""Daydream <b>Believer</b>" is a <b>song composed</b> by John Stewart shortly before he left \nthe Kingston Trio. It was originally recorded by <b>The Monkees</b>, with Davy Jones \nsinging the lead. ... It's 'cause <b>I'm</b> short, I know..." Many people did not think the \n<b>song</b> ...",
"title": "Daydream Believer"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Monkees</b> are an American rock and pop band originally active between \n1966 and 1971, with reunion albums and tours in the decades that followed. \nTheir <b>original</b> line-up consisted of the American actor/musicians Micky Dolenz ... \nNonetheless, Nesmith <b>composed</b> and produced some <b>songs</b> from the beginning, \nand Tork ...",
"title": "The Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Songwriter</b>(s) · Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart · Producer(s) · Terry Melcher. "(<b>I'm</b> \nNot Your) Steppin' Stone" is a rock <b>song</b> written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart\n. ... A-side, "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" ... Musicians featured on <b>the Monkees</b> recording are: \nMicky Dolenz (lead vocal); Tommy Boyce (backing vocal); Wayne Erwin and ...",
"title": "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone"
},
{
"snippet": "This list is an attempt to document every <b>song</b> released by American-British pop \nrock band <b>The</b> ... <b>Song</b>, <b>Year</b>, Album debut, <b>Songwriter</b>(s), Lead vocal(s) ... "<b>I'm a</b> \n<b>Believer</b>", 1966, More of <b>the Monkees</b>, Neil Diamond, Micky Dolenz. "(<b>I'm</b> Not ...",
"title": "List of songs recorded by the Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You" is a <b>song</b> by Neil Diamond that was released by \n<b>The Monkees</b> in ... It was also included in the "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" EP in Europe that \n<b>year</b>. Neil Diamond never made a studio recording of the <b>song</b> (as he had done \nwith ...",
"title": "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You"
},
{
"snippet": "More of <b>the Monkees</b> is the second studio album by the American pop rock band \n<b>the Monkees</b>. ... <b>The Monkees</b>' second single, "<b>I'm a Believer</b>"—included on this \nalbum—held the ... The band, particularly Nesmith, was also furious about the \n<b>songs</b>—selected for the ... The <b>original</b> pressing catalog number is COM/COS \n102.",
"title": "More of the Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of episodes of the television series <b>The Monkees</b> which ran on NBC \nfrom 1966 to 1968, on Monday nights at 7:30 PM Eastern (6:30 Central). The first \n<b>songs</b> listed are from the <b>original</b> NBC broadcasts. ... <b>Songs</b>: "<b>I'm a Believer</b>", "\nYou Just May Be the One" (<b>original</b> version). 1967 reruns: "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" was ...",
"title": "List of The Monkees episodes"
},
{
"snippet": ""I Wanna Be Free" is a <b>song</b> written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart that was \nfirst performed ... Boyce and Hart <b>wrote</b> "I Wanna Be Free" for <b>the Monkees</b> before \nthe group was even put together. ... Missing Links Volume Three · <b>I'm a Believer</b> \nand Other Hits · Daydream <b>Believer</b> and Other Hits · <b>The Monkees</b> Anthology · \nThe ...",
"title": "I Wanna Be Free (The Monkees song)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Songwriter</b>(s) · Michael Nesmith · Producer(s), Michael Nesmith. <b>The Monkees</b> \nsingles chronology. "Listen to the Band" (1969), "Good Clean Fun" (1969), "Oh \nMy My" (1970). "Good Clean Fun" is a <b>song</b> by <b>The Monkees</b> from their 1969 \nalbum <b>The Monkees</b> Present. ... Missing Links Volume Three · <b>I'm a Believer</b> and \nOther Hits · Daydream ...",
"title": "Good Clean Fun (The Monkees song)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who is the writer of the song \"I'm A Believer\" by The Monkees?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Monkees</b>' recording kept the novelty hit "Snoopy Vs. The Red Baron", ... \nDiamond also suggested the <b>song</b> to the Fifth Estate, who ...",
"title": "I'm a Believer"
},
{
"snippet": ""(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone" is a rock <b>song written</b> by Tommy Boyce and Bobby \nHart. ... A-side, "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" ... Musicians featured on the <b>Monkees</b> recording \nare: Micky Dolenz (lead vocal); Tommy Boyce (backing vocal); Wayne Erwin and\n ...",
"title": "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Monkees</b>' second single, "<b>I'm a Believer</b>"—included on this ... was also \nfurious about the <b>songs</b>—selected for the record from 34 that ...",
"title": "More of the Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "This list is an attempt to document every <b>song</b> released by American-British pop \nrock band The ... <b>Song</b>, Year, Album debut, <b>Songwriter</b>(s), Lead vocal(s) ... "<b>I'm a</b> \n<b>Believer</b>", 1966, More of the <b>Monkees</b>, Neil Diamond, Micky Dolenz. "(I'm Not ...",
"title": "List of songs recorded by the Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You" is a <b>song</b> by Neil Diamond that was released by \nThe <b>Monkees</b> in ... It was also included in the "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" EP in Europe that \nyear. ... While the band members chose which <b>songs</b> they would record, Kirshner \ntended to favor his <b>writing</b> stable for record releases, singles in particular. B-sides \nto ...",
"title": "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You"
},
{
"snippet": ""Daydream Believer" is a <b>song composed</b> by John Stewart shortly before he left \nthe Kingston Trio. It was originally recorded by The <b>Monkees</b>, with Davy Jones ...",
"title": "Daydream Believer"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Monkees</b> are an American rock and pop band originally active between \n1966 and 1971, ... Nonetheless, Nesmith <b>composed</b> and <b>produced</b> some <b>songs</b> \nfrom the beginning, and Tork ... Sandoval also noted that their second album, \nMore of the <b>Monkees</b>, propelled by their second single, "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" b/w "(I'm \nNot Your) ...",
"title": "The Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of episodes of the television series The <b>Monkees</b> which ran on NBC \nfrom 1966 to 1968, on Monday nights at 7:30 PM Eastern (6:30 Central). The first \n<b>songs</b> listed are from the original NBC broadcasts. ... <b>Songs</b>: "<b>I'm a Believer</b>", "\nYou Just May Be the One" (original version). 1967 reruns: "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" was ...",
"title": "List of The Monkees episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "(1966), "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" (1966). "Last Train to Clarksville" was the debut single by \nThe <b>Monkees</b>. It was released August 16, 1966, and later included on the group's \n1966 self-titled album, which was released on October 10, 1966. The <b>song</b>, \n<b>written</b> by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, was recorded at RCA ...",
"title": "Last Train to Clarksville"
},
{
"snippet": "Smash Mouth is an American rock band from San Jose, California. The band was \nformed in 1994, and was originally <b>composed</b> of Steve Harwell (lead vocals), \nKevin Coleman (drums), Greg Camp (guitar), and Paul De Lisle (bass). They are \nknown for their <b>songs</b> "Walkin' on the Sun" (1997), "All Star" (1999), ... In 2001, \nSmash Mouth covered the <b>Monkees</b>' hit <b>song</b> "<b>I'm a Believer</b>".",
"title": "Smash Mouth"
}
]
},
{
"query": "the monkees song i'm a believer",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>I'm a Believer</b>" is a <b>song</b> composed by Neil Diamond and recorded by <b>The</b> \n<b>Monkees</b> in 1966 with the lead vocals by Micky Dolenz. The single, produced by \nJeff ...",
"title": "I'm a Believer"
},
{
"snippet": ""(<b>I'm</b> Not Your) Steppin' Stone" is a rock <b>song</b> written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby \nHart. ... A-side, "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" ... Musicians featured on <b>the Monkees</b> recording \nare: Micky Dolenz (lead vocal); Tommy Boyce (backing vocal); Wayne Erwin and\n ...",
"title": "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone"
},
{
"snippet": ""Daydream <b>Believer</b>" is a <b>song</b> composed by John Stewart shortly before he left \nthe Kingston Trio. It was originally recorded by <b>the Monkees</b>, with Davy Jones \nsinging the lead. ... It's 'cause <b>I'm</b> short, I know..." Many did not think the <b>song</b> \nwould ...",
"title": "Daydream Believer"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of episodes of the television series <b>The Monkees</b> which ran on NBC \nfrom 1966 to 1968, on Monday nights at 7:30 PM Eastern (6:30 Central). The first \n<b>songs</b> listed are from the original NBC broadcasts. ... <b>Songs</b>: "<b>I'm a Believer</b>", "\nYou Just May Be the One" (original version). 1967 reruns: "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" was ...",
"title": "List of The Monkees episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "This list is an attempt to document every <b>song</b> released by American-British pop \nrock band <b>The</b> ... "<b>I'm a Believer</b>", 1966, More of <b>the Monkees</b>, Neil Diamond, \nMicky Dolenz. "(<b>I'm</b> Not Your) Steppin' Stone", 1966, More of <b>the Monkees</b>, \nTommy ...",
"title": "List of songs recorded by the Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "More of <b>the Monkees</b> is the second studio album by the American pop rock band \n<b>the Monkees</b>. ... <b>The Monkees</b>' second single, "<b>I'm a Believer</b>"—included on this \nalbum—held the number one position on the ... The band, particularly Nesmith, \nwas also furious about the <b>songs</b>—selected for the record from 34 that had been\n ...",
"title": "More of the Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>I'm a Believer</b> and Other Hits (1997), Daydream <b>Believer</b> and Other Hits (1998), \n<b>The Monkees</b> Anthology (1998). Daydream <b>Believer</b> and Other Hits is a budget-\nprice <b>Monkees</b> compilation released in 1998. ... "<b>I'm a Believer</b> and Other Hits - \n<b>The Monkees</b> - <b>Songs</b>, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. ^ "Daydream <b>Believer</b> and \nOther ...",
"title": "Daydream Believer and Other Hits"
},
{
"snippet": "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You" is a <b>song</b> by Neil Diamond that was released by \n<b>The Monkees</b> in ... It was also included in the "<b>I'm a Believer</b>" EP in Europe that \nyear. Neil Diamond never made a studio recording of the <b>song</b> (as he had done \nwith ...",
"title": "A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You"
},
{
"snippet": ""I Wanna Be Free" is a <b>song</b> written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart that was \nfirst performed ... Missing Links Volume Three · <b>I'm a Believer</b> and Other Hits · \nDaydream <b>Believer</b> and Other Hits · <b>The Monkees</b> Anthology · The Definitive \n<b>Monkees</b> ...",
"title": "I Wanna Be Free (The Monkees song)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Good Clean Fun" is a <b>song</b> by <b>The Monkees</b> from their 1969 album <b>The</b> \n<b>Monkees</b> Present. ... Missing Links Volume Three · <b>I'm a Believer</b> and Other Hits · \nDaydream <b>Believer</b> and Other Hits · <b>The Monkees</b> Anthology · The Definitive \n<b>Monkees</b> ...",
"title": "Good Clean Fun (The Monkees song)"
}
]
}
] |
First new zealander to run a mile in under four minutes? | 8257407179708148752 | Four-minute mile | [
"John Walker"
] | [
"John Walker (runner)",
"Four-minute mile"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"John Walker"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"John Walker"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"John Walker"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "mile in under four minutes",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "A four-minute mile is the completion of a mile run (1,760 yards, or 1,609.344 \nmeters) in four ... This article is about the running of a mile in less than four \nminutes. For the album by The Get Up Kids, see Four Minute Mile. For the 2014 \nfilm, see 4 ...",
"title": "Four-minute mile"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir Roger Gilbert Bannister CH CBE FRCP (23 March 1929 – 3 March 2018) was \na British ... On the 50th anniversary of running the <b>mile in under four minutes</b>, \nBannister was interviewed by the BBC's sports correspondent Rob Bonnet. At the\n ...",
"title": "Roger Bannister"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of American high school students who have run a <b>four</b>-<b>minute mile</b> \nsince the feat was first accomplished in 1964. The first person to run a <b>mile</b> (1,760 \nyards, or 1,609 metres) in <b>under four minutes</b> was ...",
"title": "List of American high school students who have run a four-minute mile"
},
{
"snippet": "Four Minute Mile is the debut studio album by American rock band The Get Up \nKids. ... For the running of a mile in under four minutes, see four-minute mile.",
"title": "Four Minute Mile"
},
{
"snippet": "4 Minute Mile is a 2014 drama film directed by Charles-Olivier Michaud, written \nby Josh ... Jump to navigation Jump to search. This article is about a 2014 film. \nFor the running of a mile in under four minutes, see Four-minute mile.",
"title": "4 Minute Mile"
},
{
"snippet": "James Ronald "Jim" Ryun (born April 29, 1947) is a former American politician \nand Olympic ... He won a silver medal in the 1500 m at the 1968 Summer \nOlympics, and was the first high school athlete to run a <b>mile in under four minutes</b>\n.",
"title": "Jim Ryun"
},
{
"snippet": "The world record in the <b>mile</b> run is the best mark set by a male or female runner \nin the ... Bannister vied to be the first to break the fabled <b>four</b>-<b>minute mile</b> barrier. \n... Text is available <b>under</b> the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License ...",
"title": "Mile run world record progression"
},
{
"snippet": "The Perfect <b>Mile</b>: Three Athletes, One Goal, and <b>Less Than Four Minutes</b> to \nAchieve It (2004) by Neal Bascomb is a non-fiction book about three runners and\n ...",
"title": "The Perfect Mile"
},
{
"snippet": "... a race - 1970s is my guess - in which at least five runners got home in <b>less than</b> \n<b>four minutes</b>.",
"title": "Talk:Four-minute mile"
},
{
"snippet": "Timothy Ralph "Tim" Danielson is a former American middle distance runner. He \nis one of only ten U.S. high school athletes to ever run the <b>mile in under four</b> \n<b>minutes</b>.",
"title": "Tim Danielson"
}
]
},
{
"query": "First new zealander to run a mile in under four minutes?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>New Zealand's</b> John Walker, who with a 3:49.4 performance in August 1975 \nbecame the <b>first</b> man to <b>run</b> the <b>mile under</b> 3:50, <b>ran</b> 135 sub-<b>four</b>-<b>minute miles</b> ...",
"title": "Four-minute mile"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir John George Walker, KNZM, CBE (born 12 January 1952) is a former middle-\ndistance runner from <b>New Zealand</b> who won the 1500 m event at the 1976 \nOlympics. He was also the <b>first</b> person to <b>run</b> the <b>mile in under</b> 3:50. ... Walker \nbecame the <b>first</b> man in history to <b>run</b> 100 <b>sub-4 minute miles</b> in 1985, achieving \nthat feat ...",
"title": "John Walker (runner)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of American high school students who have <b>run</b> a <b>four</b>-<b>minute mile</b> \nsince the feat was <b>first</b> accomplished in 1964. The <b>first</b> person to <b>run a mile</b> (1,760 \nyards, or 1,609 metres) in <b>under</b> four ... Lukas Verzbicas, 3:59.71, June 11, 2011, \nAdidas Grand Prix, <b>New</b> York City, <b>New</b> York. Matthew Maton, 3:59.38, May 8, ...",
"title": "List of American high school students who have run a four-minute mile"
},
{
"snippet": "Portal:<b>New Zealand</b>/Selected article/36 ... Walker is best known for being the <b>first</b> \nhuman being to <b>run</b> the <b>mile in under</b> 3:50 <b>minutes</b>, posting a time of 3:49.4, ...",
"title": "Portal:New Zealand/Selected article/36"
},
{
"snippet": "The world record in the <b>mile run</b> is the best mark set by a male or female runner \nin the ... On the women's side, the <b>first</b> sub-5:00 <b>mile</b> was achieved by Britain's \nDiane Leather 23 days after Bannister's <b>first sub-4</b>:00 <b>mile</b>. However, the ... \nLandy's mark was not retroactively adjusted when the <b>new</b> rule came into effect. :\nvii; 69–70 ...",
"title": "Mile run world record progression"
},
{
"snippet": "Nicholas Ian Willis MNZM (born 25 April 1983) is a <b>New Zealand</b> middle distance \nrunner and ... Willis was the <b>first New Zealander</b> to win the <b>race</b> since John \nWalker in 1984. ... in <b>New Zealand</b>. At the same meet, Willis <b>ran</b> a sub-<b>four</b>-\n<b>minute mile</b>. ... "Nick Willis receives Olympic silver medal and <b>runs Sub 4</b>-<b>mile</b>". \nOceania ...",
"title": "Nick Willis"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir Murray Gordon Halberg ONZ MBE (born 7 July 1933) is a <b>New Zealand</b> \nformer middle distance runner who won the gold medal in the 5000 metres event \nat the 1960 Olympics. He also won gold medals in the 3 <b>miles</b> events at the 1958 \nand 1962 ... Halberg became the <b>first</b> sub <b>four</b>-<b>minute</b> miler from <b>New Zealand</b>, \nand won ...",
"title": "Murray Halberg"
},
{
"snippet": "Diane Leather Charles (7 January 1933 – 5 September 2018) was an English \nathlete who was the <b>first</b> woman to <b>run</b> a sub-5-minute <b>mile</b>. Contents. 1 <b>Early</b> life; \n2 Athletic career; 3 Personal life; 4 References; 5 External links ... days since \nRoger Bannister had become the <b>first</b> man to <b>run</b> a <b>sub 4</b>-<b>minute mile</b>, 100 km \naway.",
"title": "Diane Leather"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>mile run</b> is a middle-distance foot <b>race</b>. The history of the <b>mile run</b> event \nbegan in England, where it was used as a distance for gambling races. It \nsurvived track and field's switch to metric distances in the 1900s and retained its \npopularity, with the chase for the <b>four</b>-<b>minute mile</b> in the 1950s a high point for the \n<b>race</b>. ... Englishman Roger Bannister became the <b>first</b> person to achieve the feat \nin ...",
"title": "Mile run"
},
{
"snippet": "John Michael Landy, AC, CVO, MBE, FTSE (born 12 April 1930) is a retired \nAustralian middle-distance runner and state governor. He was the second man to \nbreak the <b>four</b>-<b>minute mile</b> barrier in the <b>mile run</b>, ... Landy <b>ran</b> his second <b>sub-4</b>-\n<b>minute mile</b> in the <b>race</b>, but lost to Roger Bannister, who had his best-ever time.",
"title": "John Landy"
}
]
}
] |
Who came first the monkees or the beatles? | 8269812135696097349 | The Monkees | [
"The Beatles"
] | [
"The Beatles in film",
"The Monkees (album)",
"The Beatles (TV series)",
"The Monkees",
"The Monkees (TV series)",
"The Beatles (album)",
"The Beatles"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"The Beatles"
],
"question": "Did the Beatles or the Monkees come first in the music world?|Which group between \"The Monkees\" and \"The Beatles\" came first in music?|Who came first The Monkees (band) or The Beatles (band)?"
},
{
"answer": [
"The Beatles"
],
"question": "Who was the first to have a t.v. seires between the Monkees and the Beatles?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "the beatles tv series",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> is an animated <b>television series</b> featuring representations of the \npopular English rock band of the same name. It was originally broadcast from \n1965 ...",
"title": "The Beatles (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> Anthology is a documentary <b>television series</b> on the career of <b>the</b> \n<b>Beatles</b>. It was broadcast on UK television in six parts on ITV between 26 ...",
"title": "The Beatles Anthology (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "B. <b>The Beatles</b> (<b>TV series</b>) · The Beatles Anthology (TV series) ... E. The Ed \nSullivan Show ... The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute to The \nBeatles ...",
"title": "Category:The Beatles and television"
},
{
"snippet": "The Fifth <b>Beatle</b> is an upcoming American television miniseries, based on the \ngraphic novel of ... "'The Fifth <b>Beatle</b>: The Brian Epstein Story' in the Works as \nBravo <b>TV Series</b>". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 7, 2018. ^ Littleton, \nCynthia ...",
"title": "The Fifth Beatle (miniseries)"
},
{
"snippet": "Providence is an American medical drama <b>television series</b> created by John \nMasius, that aired ... In the United States, the theme song was "In My Life", a \ncover of <b>the Beatles</b> song performed by Chantal Kreviazuk. Internationally, the \ntheme ...",
"title": "Providence (American TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> followed Ed's show opening intro, performing "All My ... On the \nevening of the <b>television show</b> (February 16) a crush of ...",
"title": "The Ed Sullivan Show"
},
{
"snippet": "Main article: <b>The Beatles</b> Anthology (<b>TV series</b>) ... three double-CD albums), <b>The</b> \n<b>Beatles</b> Anthology series of documentaries ...",
"title": "The Beatles Anthology"
},
{
"snippet": "The Monkees are an American rock and pop band originally active between \n1966 and 1971, ... Newspapers and magazines reported that the Monkees \noutsold <b>the Beatles</b> and ... Folk & Roll Musicians-Singers for acting roles in new \n<b>TV series</b>.",
"title": "The Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "B. Batfink · The Beagles (TV series) · <b>The Beatles</b> (<b>TV series</b>) · Bob Hope \nPresents the Chrysler Theatre. C. Candid Camera · Captain Nice · The Catholic \nHour ...",
"title": "Category:1967 American television series endings"
},
{
"snippet": "The Beatles were an English rock band of the 1960s. The Beatles may also refer \nto: The Beatles (album), a 1968 album by the Beatles; <b>The Beatles</b> (<b>TV series</b>), ...",
"title": "The Beatles (disambiguation)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "the beatles",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> were an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1960. With a line-\nup comprising John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr,\n ...",
"title": "The Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b>, also known as the White Album, is the ninth studio album and only \ndouble album by the English rock band <b>the Beatles</b>, released on 22 November ...",
"title": "The Beatles (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "In their native United Kingdom, between 1962 and 1970, the English rock band \n<b>the Beatles</b> released 12 studio albums (13 worldwide), 13 extended plays (EPs) ...",
"title": "The Beatles discography"
},
{
"snippet": "With <b>the Beatles</b> is the second studio album by the English rock band <b>the Beatles</b>. \nIt was released on 22 November 1963 on Parlophone, exactly eight months ...",
"title": "With the Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> is an animated television series featuring representations of the \npopular English rock band of the same name. It was originally broadcast from \n1965 ...",
"title": "The Beatles (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "In February 1968, the English rock band <b>the Beatles</b> travelled to Rishikesh in \nnorthern India to take part in a Transcendental Meditation (TM) training course at\n ...",
"title": "The Beatles in India"
},
{
"snippet": "English rock group <b>The Beatles</b> sent out spoken and musical messages on flexi \ndisc to members of their official fan clubs in the United Kingdom (UK) and the ...",
"title": "The Beatles' Christmas records"
},
{
"snippet": "John Winston Ono Lennon MBE was an English singer, songwriter and peace \nactivist who ... Lennon in 1964. Brian Epstein managed <b>the Beatles</b> from 1962 \nuntil his death in 1967. He had no previous experience managing artists, but he \nhad ...",
"title": "John Lennon"
},
{
"snippet": "The original lineup of <b>the Beatles</b>, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George \nHarrison, Stuart Sutcliffe and Pete Best regularly performed at different clubs in ...",
"title": "The Beatles in Hamburg"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> at the Hollywood Bowl is a live album by <b>the Beatles</b>, released in \nMay 1977, featuring songs compiled from performances at the Hollywood Bowl in\n ...",
"title": "The Beatles at the Hollywood Bowl"
}
]
},
{
"query": "when did the beatles form",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>Beatles were</b> an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1960. With a line-\nup comprising ... One of these threads <b>was</b> their take on folk music, which would \n<b>form</b> such essential groundwork for their later collisions with Indian music and ...",
"title": "The Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Beatles were</b> a rock group from Liverpool, England. This timeline chronicles \ntheir activities. ... 1957, Mar, B, Lennon <b>forms</b> a skiffle group called the Black \nJacks with Pete Shotton. The band is later renamed the Quarrymen. UK. 1957, \nJun ...",
"title": "The Beatles timeline"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Beatles were</b> an English rock band consisting of John Lennon, Paul \nMcCartney, George ... The press release took the <b>form</b> of a Q&A in which \nMcCartney discussed his album and, with Lennon's exit still being withheld from \nthe public (for ...",
"title": "Break-up of the Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": "The English rock band the <b>Beatles</b> are commonly regarded as the foremost and \nmost influential ... The <b>Beatles</b> often incorporated classical elements, traditional \npop <b>forms</b> and unconventional recording techniques in ... Over the 1960s as a \nwhole, the <b>Beatles were</b> the dominant youth-centred pop act on the sales charts.",
"title": "Cultural impact of the Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": "Apple Corps Limited (informally known as Apple) is a multi-armed multimedia \ncorporation founded in London in January 1968 by the members of the <b>Beatles</b> to \nreplace their earlier company (<b>Beatles</b> Ltd) and to <b>form</b> a ... From 1970 to 2007, \nApple's chief executive <b>was</b> former <b>Beatles</b> road manager Neil Aspinall, although \nhe ...",
"title": "Apple Corps"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Beatles were</b> an English rock band from Liverpool who recorded hundreds of \nsongs during ... the rock era, the group's music pioneered new recording \ntechniques and <b>was</b> primarily responsible for pop music's evolution into an art \n<b>form</b>.",
"title": "List of songs recorded by the Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": ""Yesterday" is a song by the English rock band the <b>Beatles</b>, written by Paul \nMcCartney and ... The patience of the other <b>Beatles was</b> also tested by \nMcCartney's work in progress; George Harrison summed this ... while the bridge, \nor "middle eight", is the more standard <b>form</b> of eight bars; often two four-bar \nphrases combined.",
"title": "Yesterday (Beatles song)"
},
{
"snippet": "The show takes the <b>form</b> of a roughly chronological history of The <b>Beatles</b> via \ntheir ... Founding members <b>were</b> Mark Lewis, Eddie Lineberry, Bill Connearney, ...",
"title": "Rain: A Tribute to the Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": "Apple Records is a record label founded by the <b>Beatles</b> in 1968 as a division of \nApple Corps ... Apple Corps Ltd <b>was</b> conceived by the <b>Beatles</b> in 1967 after the \ndeath of their manager Brian Epstein. ... which the apple (in shrunken cartoon \n<b>form</b>) is eaten away at its core (this <b>was</b> intended to be a joke because it <b>was</b> \nreleased ...",
"title": "Apple Records"
},
{
"snippet": "Beatlemania <b>was</b> the intense fan frenzy surrounding the English band the \n<b>Beatles</b> in the 1960s. The group's popularity grew in the United Kingdom \nthroughout ...",
"title": "Beatlemania"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who came first the monkees or the beatles?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Monkees</b> are an American rock and pop band originally active between \n1966 and 1971, ... Newspapers and magazines reported that <b>the Monkees</b> \noutsold the <b>Beatles</b> and the Rolling Stones combined in 1967, ... and song-\nmaking strategy of the <b>first</b> albums except with a clear indication of how [the \nmusic] <b>came</b> to be.",
"title": "The Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "A boy band (or boyband) is loosely defined as a vocal group consisting of young \nmale singers, ... The Liverpool quartet known as The <b>Beatles</b> were not only the \nquintessential ... The group were one of the <b>first</b> bands, like <b>The Monkees</b> before \nthem, to take the ... "Looking Back at How 'K-Pop' <b>Came</b> to Billboard 20 Years \nAgo".",
"title": "Boy band"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Monkees</b> was an American situation comedy that <b>first</b> aired on NBC in two \nlong series ... They were inspired by the <b>Beatles</b>' film A Hard Day's Night and \ndecided to develop a television series about a fictional rock and roll group. \nRaybert ...",
"title": "The Monkees (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "David Thomas Jones (30 December 1945 – 29 February 2012) was an English ... \nThis was the same episode of the show in which the <b>Beatles</b> made their <b>first</b> ... \nlast) <b>came</b> to fruition entitled, An Evening with <b>The Monkees</b>: The 45th \nAnniversary ...",
"title": "Davy Jones (musician)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Last Train to Clarksville" was the debut single by <b>The Monkees</b>. It was released \nAugust 16, 1966, and later included on the group's 1966 self-titled album, which ...",
"title": "Last Train to Clarksville"
},
{
"snippet": "A Hard Day's Night is a 1964 musical comedy film directed by Richard Lester and \nstarring the ... Despite the fact that the original working titles of the film were <b>first</b> \nThe <b>Beatles</b> and then ... I <b>came</b> up still thinking it was day I suppose, and I said, '\nIt's been a hard day ...' and I ... Total Control: <b>The Monkees</b> Michael Nesmith Story\n.",
"title": "A Hard Day's Night (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>Beatle</b> boot is a style of boot that has been worn since the 1960s—made \npopular by the ... During the late 2000s and <b>early</b> 2010s the boots have seen a \nsteady surge in popularity. Notable wearers[edit]. Non-fictional[edit]. Carl Barât · \nThe <b>Beatles</b> · Michael Jackson · The Dave Clark Five · <b>The Monkees</b> · Michael \nKueppers ...",
"title": "Beatle boot"
},
{
"snippet": "Help! is a 1965 British musical comedy-adventure film directed by Richard Lester, \nstarring the ... The second film starring the <b>Beatles</b> following Lester's A Hard \nDay's Night, Help! sees the group ... While not reviewed at the time with the same \nhigh level of admiration as their <b>first</b> film, the film is regarded a half century later \nas ...",
"title": "Help! (film)"
},
{
"snippet": ""I'm a Believer" is a song composed by Neil Diamond and recorded by <b>The</b> \n<b>Monkees</b> in 1966 ... 9 on the ARIA Singles Chart, received a Platinum certification \nfor sales exceeding 70,000, and <b>came</b> in at number 36 on ARIA's year-end chart \n... It was Wyatt's <b>first</b> recording after the June 1973 accident that left him a \nparaplegic.",
"title": "I'm a Believer"
},
{
"snippet": "Harry Edward Nilsson III (June 15, 1941 – January 15, 1994), known \nmononymously as Nilsson ... Nilsson created the <b>first</b> remix album (Aerial \nPandemonium Ballet, 1971) and recorded the <b>first</b> ... Eventually a message <b>came</b>\n, inviting him to London to meet the <b>Beatles</b>, watch them at work, and possibly \nsign with Apple Corps.",
"title": "Harry Nilsson"
}
]
},
{
"query": "the beatles movie",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> were an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1960. With a line-\nup comprising John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr,\n ...",
"title": "The Beatles in film"
},
{
"snippet": "Yesterday is a 2019 British romantic comedy <b>film</b> directed by Danny Boyle and \nscreenplay by Richard Curtis, based on a story by Jack Barth and Curtis. The <b>film</b>, \nnamed after the song of the same name written by Paul McCartney, ... In addition \nto acting, <b>the Beatles</b> cover songs in the <b>film</b> are sung by Patel, who also plays \nthe ...",
"title": "Yesterday (2019 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b> were an English rock band formed in Liverpool in 1960. With a line-\nup comprising ... Released in July, <b>the Beatles</b>' second <b>film</b>, Help!, was again \ndirected by Lester. Described as "mainly a relentless spoof of Bond", it inspired a\n ...",
"title": "The Beatles"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b>' <b>Movie</b> Medley" is a compilation of snippets from various Beatles \nsongs. It remains the only Beatles single not released on compact disc or music ...",
"title": "The Beatles Movie Medley"
},
{
"snippet": "Yellow Submarine is a 1968 British animated <b>film</b> inspired by the music of <b>the</b> \n<b>Beatles</b>, directed by animation producer George Dunning, and produced by \nUnited ...",
"title": "Yellow Submarine (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Across the Universe is a 2007 jukebox musical romantic drama <b>film</b> directed by \nJulie Taymor, centered on songs by the English rock band <b>the Beatles</b>. The script\n ...",
"title": "Across the Universe (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "A Hard Day's Night is a 1964 musical comedy <b>film</b> directed by Richard Lester and \nstarring the English rock band <b>the Beatles</b>—John Lennon, Paul McCartney, ...",
"title": "A Hard Day's Night (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Help! is a 1965 British musical comedy-adventure <b>film</b> directed by Richard Lester, \nstarring <b>the Beatles</b>–John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and ...",
"title": "Help! (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Let It Be is a 1970 British documentary <b>film</b> starring <b>the Beatles</b> and directed by \nMichael Lindsay-Hogg. The <b>film</b> documents the group rehearsing and recording ...",
"title": "Let It Be (1970 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Beatles</b>: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years is a 2016 documentary <b>film</b> \ndirected by Ron Howard about <b>the Beatles</b>' career during their touring years ...",
"title": "The Beatles: Eight Days a Week"
}
]
},
{
"query": "when did the monkees form",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Monkees</b> are an American rock and pop band originally active between \n1966 and 1971, ... However, NBC <b>was</b> not interested in eliminating the existing \n<b>format</b>, and the group (except for Peter) had little desire to continue for a third \nseason.",
"title": "The Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Monkees was</b> an American situation comedy that first aired on NBC in two \nlong series ... Had the series been renewed for a third season, <b>the Monkees</b> had \nplanned on abandoning the sitcom <b>format</b> and retooling the series. Ideas that had\n ...",
"title": "The Monkees (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>The Monkees</b> Present is <b>the Monkees</b>' eighth album. By the time recording had \nbegun in earnest for this album, <b>the Monkees</b> had passed their popularity peak, \nand as Screen Gems cared less and less about <b>the Monkees</b>' activities, the \nmembers <b>were</b> given more control over ... Nesmith announced that he <b>was</b> \nleaving <b>the Monkees</b> to <b>form</b> his own group ...",
"title": "The Monkees Present"
},
{
"snippet": ""Last Train to Clarksville" <b>was</b> the debut single by <b>The Monkees</b>. It <b>was</b> released \nAugust 16, ... B-side, "Take a Giant Step". Released, August 16, 1966. Format, 7". \nRecorded, July 25, 1966. RCA Victor Studios, Studio A Hollywood, CA.",
"title": "Last Train to Clarksville"
},
{
"snippet": ""I'm a Believer" is a song composed by Neil Diamond and recorded by <b>The</b> \n<b>Monkees</b> in 1966 ... Released, November 12, 1966. Format, 7". Recorded, \nOctober 15 & 23, 1966 ... The song <b>was</b> originally used in the home video version \nof the Coen brothers' 1984 film Blood Simple, but after licensing issues <b>were</b> \nsettled, <b>was</b> ...",
"title": "I'm a Believer"
},
{
"snippet": "Peter Halsten Thorkelson (February 13, 1942 – February 21, 2019), known \nprofessionally as Peter Tork, <b>was</b> an American musician, composer and actor, \nbest known as the keyboardist and bass guitarist of <b>The Monkees</b>. He grew up in \nConnecticut and in the mid-1960s <b>was</b> part of the Greenwich ... Tork <b>was</b> a \nproficient musician before he joined <b>The Monkees</b>, and though ...",
"title": "Peter Tork"
},
{
"snippet": ""Daydream Believer" is a song composed by John Stewart shortly before he left \nthe Kingston Trio. It <b>was</b> originally recorded by <b>the Monkees</b>, with Davy Jones \nsinging the lead. ... from the album The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees · B-side, \n"Goin' Down". Released, October 25, 1967. Format, 7". Recorded, June 14, 1967",
"title": "Daydream Believer"
},
{
"snippet": "Changes is the ninth studio album by <b>the Monkees</b>. The album <b>was</b> issued after \nMichael ... The track later surfaced on <b>the Monkees</b> rarities collection Missing \nLinks and in remixed <b>form</b> as a bonus track on the 1994 CD release of Changes.",
"title": "Changes (The Monkees album)"
},
{
"snippet": "David Thomas Jones (30 December 1945 – 29 February 2012) <b>was</b> an English ... \nThe NBC television series <b>the Monkees was</b> popular, and remained in \nsyndication. ... Jones also appeared in animated <b>form</b> as himself in 1972 in an \nhour-long ...",
"title": "Davy Jones (musician)"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of official recordings by <b>The Monkees</b>. Contents. 1 Albums. 1.1 \nStudio albums; 1.2 ... Justus <b>was</b> released initially only on cassette and CD but, \nnot on vinyl, but <b>was</b> issued on limited edition vinyl on October 30, 2012. ... \nAustralian Chart Book 1970–1992 (doc) |<b>format</b>= requires |url= (help). Australian \nChart Book ...",
"title": "The Monkees discography"
}
]
},
{
"query": "The Monkees (album)",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>The Monkees</b> is the first <b>album</b> by the band <b>the Monkees</b>. It was released in \nOctober 1966 by Colgems Records in the United States and RCA Victor in the \nrest of ...",
"title": "The Monkees (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Decade, Title, <b>Album</b> details, Peak chart positions. US. 1960s, <b>The Monkees</b> \nGreatest Hits. Released: June 1969; Label: ...",
"title": "The Monkees discography"
},
{
"snippet": "When <b>The Monkees</b> was picked up as a series, ... <b>The Monkees</b>' debut and \nsecond <b>albums</b> were ...",
"title": "The Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "Australian <b>Albums</b> (Kent Music Report), 4. Canadian <b>Albums</b> (RPM), 1. Finnish \n<b>Albums</b> (Suomen virallinen lista), 1. French <b>Albums</b> (SNEP) ...",
"title": "More of the Monkees"
},
{
"snippet": "Headquarters is the third <b>album</b> issued by <b>the Monkees</b> and the first with \nsubstantial songwriting and instrumental performances by members of the group \nitself, ...",
"title": "Headquarters (The Monkees album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Head is the soundtrack to the film Head, the only theatrical release by <b>the</b> \n<b>Monkees</b>. Released in 1968 through Colgems, it was the band's sixth <b>album</b>.",
"title": "Head (The Monkees album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Changes is the ninth studio <b>album</b> by <b>the Monkees</b>. The <b>album</b> was issued after \nMichael Nesmith's exit from the band, leaving only Micky Dolenz and Davy ...",
"title": "Changes (The Monkees album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Christmas Party is the 13th <b>album</b> by <b>The Monkees</b>, released on October 12, \n2018. Produced mainly by Adam Schlesinger the <b>album</b> is <b>the Monkees</b>' first to ...",
"title": "Christmas Party (The Monkees album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Instant Replay is the seventh studio <b>album</b> by <b>the Monkees</b>. Issued six months \nafter the cancellation of the group's NBC television series, it is also the first <b>album</b>\n ...",
"title": "Instant Replay (The Monkees album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Australian <b>Albums</b> (Kent Music Report), 5. Canadian <b>Albums</b> (RPM), 6. Finnish \n<b>Albums</b> (Suomen virallinen lista), 8. German <b>Albums</b> ...",
"title": "The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees"
}
]
}
] |
Who played alotta fagina in austin powers movie? | 8291654314503371645 | Fabiana Udenio | [
"Fabiana Udenio"
] | [
"Fabiana Udenio",
"List of Austin Powers characters"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Fabiana Udenio"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Fabiana Udenio"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
},
{
"answer": [
"Fabiana Udenio"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "austin powers characters",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of fictional <b>characters</b> from the <b>Austin Powers</b> series of films. \nContents. 1 Main <b>characters</b>. 1.1 <b>Austin Powers</b>; 1.2 Dr. Evil. 2 Austin's allies.",
"title": "List of Austin Powers characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Sir Austin Danger Powers, KBE is a fictional <b>character</b> from the <b>Austin Powers</b> \nseries of films, and is created and portrayed by Mike Myers. He is the protagonist\n ...",
"title": "Austin Powers (character)"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "<b>Austin Powers characters</b>". The following 12 pages are in this \ncategory, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).",
"title": "Category:Austin Powers characters"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Austin Powers</b> (Myers), having conquered the 1990s and the 1960s, ... in the \nearlier films play different <b>characters</b> in Goldmember.",
"title": "Austin Powers in Goldmember"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Austin Powers</b> is a series of American spy action comedy films: <b>Austin Powers</b>: \nInternational ... and conceived the <b>character</b> who would become <b>Austin Powers</b>.",
"title": "Austin Powers"
},
{
"snippet": "The film spawned two sequels, <b>Austin Powers</b>: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999) \n... Mike Myers created the <b>character</b> of <b>Austin Powers</b> for the faux 1960s rock ...",
"title": "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery"
},
{
"snippet": "Dr. Evil (Douglas "Dougie" Powers) is a fictional <b>character</b> played by Mike Myers \nin the <b>Austin Powers</b> film series. He is the antagonist of the movies, and Austin ...",
"title": "Dr. Evil"
},
{
"snippet": "Number 2 is a fictional <b>character</b> in the <b>Austin Powers</b> franchise. He is played by \nRobert Wagner in all three films, while his younger self is played by Rob Lowe ...",
"title": "Number 2 (Austin Powers)"
},
{
"snippet": "Mini-Me is a <b>character</b> played by Verne Troyer in the second and third <b>Austin</b> \n<b>Powers</b> films: <b>Austin Powers</b>: The Spy Who Shagged Me and <b>Austin Powers</b> in ...",
"title": "Mini-Me"
},
{
"snippet": "Based on, <b>Characters</b> ... It stars franchise co-producer and writer Mike Myers as \n<b>Austin Powers</b>, Dr. Evil, ... It is followed by <b>Austin Powers</b> in Goldmember (2002).",
"title": "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me"
}
]
},
{
"query": "alotta fagina",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Fabiana Udenio (born 21 December 1964) is an Italian actress. Born in Argentina\n, she is best known for her role as "<b>Alotta Fagina</b>", a Bond girl parody in Austin ...",
"title": "Fabiana Udenio"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of fictional characters from the Austin Powers series of films. \n... <b>Alotta Fagina</b> is Number 2's girlfriend and secretary. Her name is a parody of \nPussy Galore, while her characterization, being Number 2's henchman, is based \non ...",
"title": "List of Austin Powers characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Pussy Galore is a fictional character in the 1959 Ian Fleming James Bond novel \nGoldfinger and ... The 1997 parody film Austin Powers: International Man of \nMystery features a character named <b>Alotta Fagina</b> in an apparent reference to \nGalore ...",
"title": "Pussy Galore"
},
{
"snippet": "Posing as a married couple, Powers and Kensington track Number 2 to Las \nVegas and meet his Italian secretary, <b>Alotta Fagina</b>. Powers infiltrates Fagina's ...",
"title": "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery"
},
{
"snippet": "A gag name is a false name intended to be humorous through its similarity to (1) \na real name ... Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery features a villain \nnamed "<b>Alotta Fagina</b>", who must repeat her name several times because Austin\n ...",
"title": "Gag name"
},
{
"snippet": "I removed, <b>Alotta Fagina</b>, Mustafa and Random Task from the character links as \nthey only refer back to the Austin Powers (series) page. If anyone thinks they are\n ...",
"title": "Template talk:Austin Powers"
},
{
"snippet": "Mami Koyama is a Japanese actress, voice actress and narrator affiliated with \nAoni Production. ... Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, <b>Alotta Fagina</b>, \nFabiana Udenio · Battle of the Sexes, Gladys Heldman, Sarah Silverman · \nBaywatch ...",
"title": "Mami Koyama"
},
{
"snippet": "... Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive166 · Wikipedia:Articles \nfor deletion/<b>Alotta Fagina</b> · Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Log/2007 February 26 ...",
"title": "File:SInnocent.gif"
},
{
"snippet": "The Linq is a 2,640-room hotel, casino and shopping promenade on the Las \nVegas Strip in ... In Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, the character \n<b>Alotta Fagina</b> stays at the Imperial Palace. The Imperial Palace is in Grand Theft \nAuto: ...",
"title": "The Linq"
},
{
"snippet": "The James Bond series of novels and films has been parodied numerous times \nin a number of ... of Powers' organisation is meant to be a combined parody of \nboth M and Q. <b>Alotta Fagina</b> is a parody, in name, of the Bond girl Pussy Galore.",
"title": "List of James Bond parodies and spin-offs"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who played alotta fagina in austin powers movie?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Fabiana Udenio (born 21 December 1964) is an Italian actress. Born in Argentina\n, she is best known for her role as "<b>Alotta Fagina</b>", a Bond girl parody in <b>Austin</b> \n<b>Powers</b>: International ... Udenio's <b>film</b> roles include playing the daughter of a \nWorld War II Resistance fighter (Barbara Bouchet) in The Scarlet and the Black ...",
"title": "Fabiana Udenio"
},
{
"snippet": "The following is a list of fictional characters from the <b>Austin Powers</b> series of films. \n... Her character is inspired by "blaxploitation"-style characters <b>played</b> by Pam \nGrier and ... However, they manage to make up by the end of the <b>film</b> (see <b>Austin</b> \n<b>Powers</b> in <b>Goldmember</b>). ... <b>Alotta Fagina</b> is Number 2's girlfriend and secretary.",
"title": "List of Austin Powers characters"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>film</b> spawned two sequels, <b>Austin Powers</b>: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999) \nand ... track Number 2 to Las Vegas and meet his Italian secretary, <b>Alotta Fagina</b>. \n... Myers sought Jim Carrey to <b>play</b> Dr. Evil, as his initial plan was not to <b>play</b> ...",
"title": "Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery"
},
{
"snippet": "Pussy Galore is a fictional character in the 1959 Ian Fleming James Bond novel \nGoldfinger and the 1964 <b>film</b> of the same name. In the <b>film</b>, she is <b>played</b> by \nHonor Blackman. ... The 1997 parody <b>film Austin Powers</b>: International Man of \nMystery features a character named <b>Alotta Fagina</b> in an apparent reference to \nGalore (and ...",
"title": "Pussy Galore"
},
{
"snippet": "So if you balanced how much of it was Austin with Dr. Evil, it's more ... Mike Myers \nannounced that a fourth <b>Austin Powers film</b> was planned, ... However, Seth Green\n, <b>who played</b> Scott Evil, stated that there ...",
"title": "Austin Powers"
},
{
"snippet": "A gag name is a false name intended to be humorous through its similarity to (1) \na real name ... Roller derby teams and <b>players</b> frequently use gag names. ... This \nis parodied in the <b>Austin Powers</b> series of spoofs on the spy genre; ... "<b>Alotta</b> \n<b>Fagina</b>", who must repeat her name several times because Austin \nmisunderstands it.",
"title": "Gag name"
},
{
"snippet": "The James Bond series of novels and films has been parodied numerous times \nin a number of ... Daniel Craig <b>played</b> Bond in a short <b>film</b>, Happy and Glorious, \nmade by the BBC, produced by Lisa Osborne ... Ernst Stavro Blofeld, the head of \nSPECTRE and Bond's archenemy, is parodied in all <b>Austin Powers</b> films as Dr. \nEvil.",
"title": "List of James Bond parodies and spin-offs"
},
{
"snippet": "The Linq is a 2,640-room hotel, casino and shopping promenade on the Las \nVegas Strip in ... 2 <b>Film</b> history; 3 Attractions ... the free Imperial Palace School of \nGaming, for gamblers who did not know how to <b>play</b>. ... In <b>Austin Powers</b>: \nInternational Man of Mystery, the character <b>Alotta Fagina</b> stays at the Imperial \nPalace.",
"title": "The Linq"
},
{
"snippet": "Mami Koyama is a Japanese actress, voice actress and narrator affiliated with \nAoni Production. ... 2019, City Hunter the <b>Movie</b>: Shinjuku Private Eyes, Miki ... \n<b>Austin Powers</b>: International Man of Mystery, <b>Alotta Fagina</b>, Fabiana Udenio ... \n個別表示:小山茉美(Mami Koyama)=小山まみ" [Voice <b>actor's</b> appearance list \nindividual ...",
"title": "Mami Koyama"
},
{
"snippet": "This WikiProject <b>Film</b> page is an archive, log collection, or currently inactive page; \nit is kept primarily for historical interest. ... categories, images, portal pages \ntemplates, and project pages with {{<b>Film</b>}} on their talk page. ... Children at <b>Play</b> · \nBeware! ... (1997 <b>film</b>) · Characters from The Incredibles · Characters in <b>Austin</b> \n<b>Powers</b> ...",
"title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Film/Articles"
}
]
}
] |
Who sings lookin for love in all the wrong places? | 8311052109282466718 | Lookin' for Love | [
"Johnny Lee"
] | [
"Lookin' for Love"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Johnny Lee"
],
"question": "Who sang the original lookin for love in all the wrong places?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Sawyer Brown"
],
"question": "Who sang lookin for love in all the wrong places in 2000?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
},
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Johnny Lee"
],
"question": "Who recorded lookin for love in all the wrong places in 1980?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Sawyer Brown"
],
"question": "Who recorded lookin for love in all the wrong places in 2000?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
},
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Johnny Lee"
],
"question": "Who sang the original version of Lookin for Love in all the wrong places?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Sawyer Brown"
],
"question": "Who sang Lookin for Love in all the wrong places in 2000?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who sings lookin for love in all the wrong places?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>Lookin' for Love</b>" is a song written by Wanda Mallette, Bob Morrison and Patti \nRyan, and recorded by American country music singer Johnny Lee. It was \nreleased in June 1980 as part of the soundtrack to the film Urban Cowboy, \nreleased that year. Marcy Levy was one of the female <b>singers</b> who provided \nbacking vocals on ... Space Nine episode "Looking for par'Mach in <b>All the Wrong</b> \n<b>Places</b>" is titled in ...",
"title": "Lookin' for Love"
},
{
"snippet": "Johnny Lee is an American country music singer. His 1980 single "<b>Lookin' for</b> \n<b>Love</b>" became a crossover hit, spending three weeks at number 1 on the \nBillboard ...",
"title": "Johnny Lee (singer)"
},
{
"snippet": "Robert Edwin Morrison (born August 6, 1942) is an American country <b>songwriter</b> \nbased in Nashville. More than 350 of his songs have been recorded. His most \nsuccessful compositions are the Grammy-winning Kenny Rogers song, "You \nDecorated My Life" and the Grammy-nominated "<b>Lookin' for Love</b>," the ... His \nfather was a jukebox operator who left the house <b>every</b> two weeks to go to ...",
"title": "Bob Morrison (songwriter)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Looking for par'Mach in <b>All the Wrong Places</b>" is the third episode of the fifth \nseason of the ... It is revealed that "par'Mach" is the Klingon word for "<b>love</b>" with \nan aggressive connotation. Michael Dorn had originally proposed a story along \nthe ...",
"title": "Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>All the Wrong Places</b>" is a song by British recording artist Example. It was \nreleased as the first ... Songwriter(s) · Elliot Gleave; Alf Bamford; Steve Hill. \nProducer(s).",
"title": "All the Wrong Places (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack is an American animated television \nseries created for ... 9a, 9a, "<b>Lookin' for Love in All the Wrong</b> Barrels", Mike Roth \nand Pendleton Ward, TBA, July 31, 2008 (2008-07-31) ... With her help, they must \nreach the "secret meeting <b>place</b>": an active volcano whose crater K'nuckles must\n ...",
"title": "List of The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Looking for <b>Love</b> is a 1964 romantic musical-comedy film starring popular singer \nConnie ... When Libby mentions that she was formerly a singer, Carson asks her \nto <b>sing</b>. Libby's <b>singing</b> career ... Johnny Carson used to joke that Looking for \n<b>Love</b> was so <b>bad</b> it was transferred to flammable nitrate film stock. ... <b>All</b> stub \narticles ...",
"title": "Looking for Love (film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Songwriter</b>(s), Will Holt. "Lemon Tree" is a folk song written by Will Holt in the late \n1950s. The tune is based on the Brazilian folk song Meu limão, meu limoeiro, \narranged by José Carlos Burle in 1937 and made popular by Brazilian singer \nWilson Simonal. The song compares <b>love</b> to a lemon tree: "Lemon tree very pretty\n, and the ... With Children episode '<b>Lookin</b>' for a Desk in <b>All the Wrong Places</b>'(\nSeason 6, ...",
"title": "Lemon Tree (Will Holt song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Milky Way is the third studio album by American rapper Bas. It was released on \nAugust 24, ... We go looking for <b>love in all the wrong places</b>. We go on radio ...",
"title": "Milky Way (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Songwriter</b>(s) · Noah Bernardo · Marcos Curiel · Traa Daniels · Sonny Sandoval · \nProducer(s) · Howard Benson · P.O.D. singles chronology. "Alive" (2001), "Youth \nof the Nation" (2001), "Boom" (2002). "Youth of the Nation" is a song by American \nChristian metal band P.O.D. It was released in ... by her father and subsequently "\nfinding <b>love in all the wrong places</b>.",
"title": "Youth of the Nation"
}
]
},
{
"query": "lookin for love in all the wrong places",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>Lookin' for Love</b>" is a song written by Wanda Mallette, Bob Morrison and Patti \nRyan, and ... The Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Looking for par'Mach in \n<b>All the Wrong Places</b>" is titled in tribute to this song ("par'Mach" is defined in the ...",
"title": "Lookin' for Love"
},
{
"snippet": "Leisure Suit Larry Goes <b>Looking for Love</b> (in Several <b>Wrong Places</b>) is the \nsecond game in the ... The game actively punishes Larry for flirting with <b>any</b> \nwoman he meets, a marked departure from the rest of the series; such acts \ninvariably leads ...",
"title": "Leisure Suit Larry Goes Looking for Love (in Several Wrong Places ..."
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>Looking</b> for par'Mach in <b>All the Wrong Places</b>" is the third episode of the fifth \nseason of the ... It is revealed that "par'Mach" is the Klingon word for "<b>love</b>" with \nan aggressive connotation. Michael Dorn had originally proposed a story along \nthe ...",
"title": "Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places"
},
{
"snippet": "Johnny Lee is an American country music singer. His 1980 single "<b>Lookin' for</b> \n<b>Love</b>" became a crossover hit, spending three weeks at number 1 on the \nBillboard ...",
"title": "Johnny Lee (singer)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>All the Wrong Places</b> may refer to: <b>All the Wrong Places</b> (book), 1988 reports from \nAsia by the ... (song), a 2013 song by the British rapper Example; The byline to \nthe song "<b>Lookin' for Love</b>" from the soundtrack of the film Urban Cowboy ...",
"title": "All the Wrong Places"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Looking for Love</b> is a 1964 romantic musical-comedy film starring popular singer \nConnie Francis. Contents. 1 Plot; 2 Cast; 3 Production; 4 Reception; 5 DVD ...",
"title": "Looking for Love (film)"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>All the Wrong Places</b>" is a song by British recording artist Example. It was \nreleased as the first single from his fifth studio album, Live Life Living, on 8 \nSeptember ...",
"title": "All the Wrong Places (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack is an American animated television \nseries created for ... 9a, 9a, "<b>Lookin' for Love in All the Wrong</b> Barrels", Mike Roth \nand Pendleton Ward, TBA, July 31, 2008 (2008-07-31) ... With her help, they must \nreach the "secret meeting <b>place</b>": an active volcano whose crater K'nuckles must\n ...",
"title": "List of The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Milky Way is the third studio album by American rapper Bas. It was released on \nAugust 24, ... We go <b>looking for love in all the wrong places</b>. We go on radio ...",
"title": "Milky Way (album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Robert Edwin Morrison (born August 6, 1942) is an American country songwriter \nbased in Nashville. More than 350 of his songs have been recorded. His most \nsuccessful compositions are the Grammy-winning Kenny Rogers song, "You \nDecorated My Life" and the Grammy-nominated "<b>Lookin' for Love</b>," the ... His \nfather was a jukebox operator who left the house <b>every</b> two weeks to go to ...",
"title": "Bob Morrison (songwriter)"
}
]
}
] |
Who wrote make you feel my love song? | 8401788301588774579 | Make You Feel My Love | [
"Bob Dylan"
] | [
"Make You Feel My Love",
"List of songs recorded by Adele"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Bob Dylan"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "make you feel my love song",
"results": [
{
"snippet": ""<b>Make You Feel My Love</b>" is a <b>song</b> written by Bob Dylan for his 1997 album Time \nOut of Mind. It was first released commercially by Billy Joel, under the title "To ...",
"title": "Make You Feel My Love"
},
{
"snippet": "One cut from the album, Garth Brooks' rendition of "To <b>Make You Feel My Love</b>", \nreached No. 1 on the Billboard country singles charts in August 1998. This <b>song</b> ...",
"title": "Hope Floats: Music from the Motion Picture"
},
{
"snippet": "Billy Joel's Greatest Hits is a collection released in two sets, 12 years apart. The \nfirst set ... All <b>songs</b> but the last three on Volume III, "To <b>Make You Feel My Love</b>", \n"Hey Girl" and "Light as the Breeze" were written by Joel. The other <b>songs</b> appear\n ...",
"title": "Greatest Hits (Billy Joel albums)"
},
{
"snippet": "Adele is an English singer-songwriter. After signing a contract with record label \nXL Recordings in September 2006, Adele began to work on her debut studio \nalbum, 19, which was ultimately released in 2008. At this time, the singer \ncontributed guest vocals on the <b>song</b> "My Yvonne" for ... and recorded a cover \nversion of Bob Dylan's "<b>Make You Feel My Love</b>".",
"title": "List of songs recorded by Adele"
},
{
"snippet": "Bob Dylan is an American singer–songwriter, author, poet and painter who has \nbeen a major ... Artist, <b>Song</b> Title, Notes ... <b>Make You Feel My Love</b> · Ring Them ...",
"title": "List of artists who have covered Bob Dylan songs"
},
{
"snippet": "19 is the debut studio album by English singer-songwriter Adele. It was first \nreleased on 28 ... Adele recorded a cover of Bob Dylan's "<b>Make You Feel My</b> \n<b>Love</b>" on the recommendation of her manager Jonathan Dickins, who ... Adele \nand White co-wrote two other <b>songs</b> for the album: "Melt My Heart to Stone" and "\nTired".",
"title": "19 (Adele album)"
},
{
"snippet": ""More Than a Memory" is a <b>song</b> written by Lee Brice, Billy Montana, and Kyle \nJacobs and ... became the second <b>song</b> to debut at #1 on Hot Country <b>Songs</b>.) \nThe <b>song</b> was also Brooks's first #1 hit since "To <b>Make You Feel My Love</b>" in \n1998.",
"title": "More Than a Memory"
},
{
"snippet": "Michaela Anne Nobilette (born August 20, 1993), also Emkay Brazil, most \ncommonly known as ... Tour 2014, Nobilette performed "<b>Make You Feel My Love</b>. \n... The original was by Bob Dylan, and Nobilette stated she performed the <b>song</b> in \na ...",
"title": "MK Nobilette"
},
{
"snippet": "In My Dreams is a British music album released by the Military Wives, originally a \nchoir of ... Featuring a number of hit singles including Bob Dylan's "<b>Make You</b> \n<b>Feel My Love</b>", U2's "With or Without You", and Coldplay's "Fix You". ... a social \nsupport network across the UK for Military Wives through the medium of <b>song</b>.",
"title": "In My Dreams (Military Wives album)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Do <b>You Feel My Love</b>" is a <b>song</b> by British reggae musician Eddy Grant from his \nalbum Can't ... Not logged in; Talk · Contributions · <b>Create</b> account · Log in ...",
"title": "Do You Feel My Love"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who wrote make you feel my love song?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "[edit]. Chart (1998), Rank. Canada Country Tracks (RPM), 63. US Country <b>Songs</b> \n(Billboard), 32.",
"title": "Make You Feel My Love"
},
{
"snippet": "Adele is an English singer-<b>songwriter</b>. After signing a contract with record label \nXL Recordings in September 2006, Adele began to work on her debut studio \nalbum, 19, which was ultimately released in 2008. At this time, the singer \ncontributed guest vocals on the <b>song</b> "My Yvonne" for ... and recorded a cover \nversion of Bob Dylan's "<b>Make You Feel My Love</b>".",
"title": "List of songs recorded by Adele"
},
{
"snippet": ""I Can't <b>Make You Love Me</b>" is a <b>song written</b> by Mike Reid and Allen Shamblin \nand recorded ... patronize ... don't patronize <b>me</b>/'<b>Cause</b> I can't <b>make you love me</b> if \n<b>you</b> don't/<b>You</b> can't <b>make</b> your heart <b>feel</b> something that it won't," she sings.",
"title": "I Can't Make You Love Me"
},
{
"snippet": "19 is the debut studio album by English singer-<b>songwriter</b> Adele. It was first \nreleased on 28 ... Adele recorded a cover of Bob Dylan's "<b>Make You Feel My</b> \n<b>Love</b>" on the recommendation of her manager Jonathan Dickins, who ... Adele \nand White co-<b>wrote</b> two other <b>songs</b> for the album: "Melt My Heart to Stone" and "\nTired".",
"title": "19 (Adele album)"
},
{
"snippet": "Bob Dylan is an American singer–<b>songwriter, author</b>, poet and painter who has \nbeen a major ... <b>Make You Feel My Love</b> · Ring Them Bells · Blackmore's Night · \nThe Times They Are a-Changin' · Norman Blake · Restless Farewell, With Peter \nOtroushko.",
"title": "List of artists who have covered Bob Dylan songs"
},
{
"snippet": "That <b>year</b>, the album reached #4 on The Billboard 200 and #1 on Top ... One cut \nfrom the album, Garth Brooks' rendition of "To <b>Make You Feel My Love</b>", reached \nNo. ... This <b>song</b> also appeared on a re-release of Brooks's 1995 album Fresh ...",
"title": "Hope Floats: Music from the Motion Picture"
},
{
"snippet": "Billy Joel's Greatest Hits is a collection released in two sets, 12 years apart. The \nfirst set ... All <b>songs</b> but the last three on Volume III, "To <b>Make You Feel My Love</b>", \n"Hey Girl" and "Light as the Breeze" were <b>written</b> by Joel. ... Some <b>original</b> \npressings omit "Don't Ask Me Why" and place "Honesty" after "Big Shot", pushing \n"You ...",
"title": "Greatest Hits (Billy Joel albums)"
},
{
"snippet": "Love Always is the third solo album by Irish singer-<b>songwriter</b> Shane Filan, as a \nfollow-up to ... The album features Filan's favorite all-time love ballads, such as \nthe Bangles' "Eternal Flame", Bob Dylan's "<b>Make You Feel My Love</b>" and Bryan ... \nPatrick Mascall, who also co-<b>wrote songs</b> from Filan's debut album You and Me.",
"title": "Love Always (Shane Filan album)"
},
{
"snippet": ""The Quarterback" is the third episode of the fifth season of the American musical \ntelevision series Glee, and the ninety-first episode overall. <b>Written</b> by all three of \nthe show's creators—Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk and ... She performs "<b>Make</b> \n<b>You Feel My Love</b>". Santana later apologizes to Sue, who reveals she is \nheartbroken ...",
"title": "The Quarterback (Glee)"
},
{
"snippet": ""More Than a Memory" is a <b>song written</b> by Lee Brice, Billy Montana, and Kyle \nJacobs and ... became the second <b>song</b> to debut at #1 on Hot Country <b>Songs</b>.) \nThe <b>song</b> was also Brooks's first #1 hit since "To <b>Make You Feel My Love</b>" in \n1998.",
"title": "More Than a Memory"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the presiding officer of the house of reps? | 8434277527016702047 | Speaker of the United States House of Representatives | [
"Paul Ryan"
] | [
"Presiding Officer of the United States Senate",
"Speaker of the United States House of Representatives"
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{
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{
"answer": [
"Paul Ryan"
],
"question": "Who is the 2015 presiding officer of the house of representative?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Nancy Pelosi"
],
"question": "Who is the current 2019 presiding officer of the house of reps?"
}
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"snippet": "As <b>presiding officer</b> of the <b>House of Representatives</b>, the speaker holds a variety \nof powers over the House and is ceremonially ...",
"title": "Speaker of the United States House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \n<b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of the Parliament of Australia.",
"title": "Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Presiding Officer</b> of the United States Senate is the person who presides \nover the United ... States Senate · Speaker of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b>, the <b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b> ...",
"title": "Presiding Officer of the United States Senate"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Texas <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nTexas <b>House of Representatives</b>. The Speaker's main duties are to conduct ...",
"title": "Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b> is the speaker (\n<b>presiding officer</b>) of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of \nthe ...",
"title": "List of Speakers of the Louisiana House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nFederal <b>House of Representatives</b> of Nigeria. Femi Gbajabiamila, was elected ...",
"title": "Speaker of the House of Representatives of Nigeria"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> election took \nplace on ... The Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is the \n<b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b>. The House \nelects its ...",
"title": "2019 Speaker of the United States House of Representatives election"
},
{
"snippet": "The speaker of a deliberative assembly, especially a legislative body, is its \n<b>presiding officer</b>, ... The Speaker of the <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding</b> \n<b>officer</b> of the Australian <b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of the \nParliament ...",
"title": "Speaker (politics)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Sergeant at Arms of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is an officer \nof the House ... Under the direction of the Speaker of the House or other \n<b>presiding officer</b>, the Sergeant at Arms plays an integral role in maintaining order \nand ...",
"title": "Sergeant at Arms of the United States House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Texas <b>House of Representatives</b> is the lower house of the bicameral Texas \nLegislature. ... The Speaker of the House is the <b>presiding officer</b> and highest-\nranking member of the House. The Speaker's duties include maintaining order \nwithin ...",
"title": "Texas House of Representatives"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who is the presiding officer of the house of reps?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "As <b>presiding officer of the House of Representatives</b>, the speaker holds a variety \nof powers over the House and is ceremonially ...",
"title": "Speaker of the United States House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Presiding Officer</b> of the United States Senate is the person who presides \nover the United ... States Senate · Speaker of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b>, the <b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b> ...",
"title": "Presiding Officer of the United States Senate"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the House of Representatives is the <b>presiding officer of the</b> \n<b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of the Parliament of Australia.",
"title": "Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Texas <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nTexas <b>House of Representatives</b>. The Speaker's main duties are to conduct ...",
"title": "Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> election took \nplace on ... The Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is the \n<b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b>. The House \nelects its ...",
"title": "2019 Speaker of the United States House of Representatives election"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nFederal <b>House of Representatives</b> of Nigeria. Femi Gbajabiamila, was elected ...",
"title": "Speaker of the House of Representatives of Nigeria"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b> is the speaker (\n<b>presiding officer</b>) of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of \nthe ...",
"title": "List of Speakers of the Louisiana House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Sergeant at Arms of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is an <b>officer</b> \n<b>of the House</b> ... Under the direction of the Speaker of the House or other \n<b>presiding officer</b>, the Sergeant at Arms plays an integral role in maintaining order \nand ...",
"title": "Sergeant at Arms of the United States House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Iowa <b>House of Representatives</b> is the lower house of the Iowa General \nAssembly, the ... The <b>presiding officer</b> is the Speaker of the House, who is chosen \nby the majority party and elected by the House. In addition, representatives elect \na ...",
"title": "List of current members of the Iowa House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Texas <b>House of Representatives</b> is the lower house of the bicameral Texas \nLegislature. ... The Speaker of the House is the <b>presiding officer</b> and highest-\nranking member of the House. The Speaker's duties include maintaining order \nwithin ...",
"title": "Texas House of Representatives"
}
]
},
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"query": "presiding officer of the house of reps",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "As <b>presiding officer of the House of Representatives</b>, the speaker holds a variety \nof powers over the House and is ceremonially ...",
"title": "Speaker of the United States House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Texas <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nTexas <b>House of Representatives</b>. The Speaker's main duties are to conduct ...",
"title": "Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the House of Representatives is the <b>presiding officer of the</b> \n<b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of the Parliament of Australia.",
"title": "Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The 2019 Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> election took \nplace on ... The Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is the \n<b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b>. The House \nelects its ...",
"title": "2019 Speaker of the United States House of Representatives election"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Presiding Officer</b> of the United States Senate is the person who presides \nover the United ... States Senate · Speaker of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b>, the <b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b> ...",
"title": "Presiding Officer of the United States Senate"
},
{
"snippet": "The speaker of a deliberative assembly, especially a legislative body, is its \n<b>presiding officer</b>, ... The Speaker of the <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding</b> \n<b>officer</b> of the Australian <b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of the \nParliament ...",
"title": "Speaker (politics)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nFederal <b>House of Representatives</b> of Nigeria. Femi Gbajabiamila, was elected ...",
"title": "Speaker of the House of Representatives of Nigeria"
},
{
"snippet": "The Sergeant at Arms of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is an <b>officer</b> \n<b>of the House</b> ... Under the direction of the Speaker of the House or other \n<b>presiding officer</b>, the Sergeant at Arms plays an integral role in maintaining order \nand ...",
"title": "Sergeant at Arms of the United States House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b> is the speaker (\n<b>presiding officer</b>) of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of \nthe ...",
"title": "List of Speakers of the Louisiana House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Oklahoma <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> \nof the lower house of the Oklahoma Legislature, the Oklahoma <b>House of</b> ...",
"title": "List of Speakers of the Oklahoma House of Representatives ..."
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who is the presiding officer of the house of reps",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "As <b>presiding officer of the House of Representatives</b>, the speaker holds a variety \nof powers over the House and is ceremonially ...",
"title": "Speaker of the United States House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Presiding Officer</b> of the United States Senate is the person who presides \nover the United ... States Senate · Speaker of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b>, the <b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of</b> \n<b>Representatives</b> ...",
"title": "Presiding Officer of the United States Senate"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the House of Representatives is the <b>presiding officer of the</b> \n<b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of the Parliament of Australia.",
"title": "Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Texas <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nTexas <b>House of Representatives</b>. The Speaker's main duties are to conduct ...",
"title": "Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives"
},
{
"snippet": "The Sergeant at Arms of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is an <b>officer</b> \n<b>of the House</b> ... Under the direction of the Speaker of the House or other \n<b>presiding officer</b>, the Sergeant at Arms plays an integral role in maintaining order \nand ...",
"title": "Sergeant at Arms of the United States House of Representatives ..."
},
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"snippet": "The 2019 Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> election took \nplace on ... The Speaker of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b> is the \n<b>presiding officer</b> of the United States <b>House of Representatives</b>. The House \nelects its ...",
"title": "2019 Speaker of the United States House of Representatives election"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the <b>House of Representatives</b> is the <b>presiding officer</b> of the \nFederal <b>House of Representatives</b> of Nigeria. Femi Gbajabiamila, was elected ...",
"title": "Speaker of the House of Representatives of Nigeria"
},
{
"snippet": "The Speaker of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b> is the speaker (\n<b>presiding officer</b>) of the Louisiana <b>House of Representatives</b>, the lower house of \nthe ...",
"title": "List of Speakers of the Louisiana House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Iowa <b>House of Representatives</b> is the lower house of the Iowa General \nAssembly, the ... The <b>presiding officer</b> is the Speaker of the House, who is chosen \nby the majority party and elected by the House. In addition, representatives elect \na ...",
"title": "List of current members of the Iowa House of Representatives ..."
},
{
"snippet": "The Texas <b>House of Representatives</b> is the lower house of the bicameral Texas \nLegislature. ... The Speaker of the House is the <b>presiding officer</b> and highest-\nranking member of the House. The Speaker's duties include maintaining order \nwithin ...",
"title": "Texas House of Representatives"
}
]
}
] |
When did friday the 13th the game come out? | 8554721282818506215 | Friday the 13th: The Game | [
"May 26 , 2017"
] | [
"Friday the 13th (1980 film)",
"Friday the 13th: The Game"
] | [
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"answer": null,
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"answer": [
"May 26, 2017"
],
"question": "When did friday the 13th the game come out as digital release?"
},
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"answer": [
"October 13, 2017"
],
"question": "When did friday the 13th the game come out as a physical release?"
},
{
"answer": [
"August 13, 2019"
],
"question": "When did friday the 13th the game come out for Nintendo Switch?"
}
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"type": "multipleQAs"
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{
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{
"answer": [
"May 26, 2017"
],
"question": "When did friday the 13th the game come out as a digital release?"
},
{
"answer": [
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],
"question": "When did friday the 13th the game come out as a physical release for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One?"
},
{
"answer": [
"August 13, 2019"
],
"question": "When did friday the 13th the game come out for Nintendo Switch?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
},
{
"answer": null,
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{
"answer": [
"May 26, 2017"
],
"question": "When did Friday the 13th: The Game release as a digital release?"
},
{
"answer": [
"October 13, 2017"
],
"question": "When did Friday the 13th: The Game release for Xbox One?"
},
{
"answer": [
"August 13, 2019"
],
"question": "When did Friday the 13th: The Game release for Nintendo Switch?"
},
{
"answer": [
"October 13, 2017"
],
"question": "When did Friday the 13th: The Game come out for PlayStation 4?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "friday the 13th game release",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>game</b> was pushed back from the fall <b>release</b> date, ... <b>Friday the 13th</b>: Ultimate \nSlasher Switch Edition for the Nintendo Switch was ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: The Game"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a survival horror video <b>game</b> published by LJN and developed \nby Japanese ... In 2017, after developer IllFonic <b>released Friday the 13th</b>: The \n<b>Game</b>, a "Retro Jason" skin based on Jason from the 1989 <b>game</b> was added by ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1989 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "In May 1986, Domark <b>released</b> a <b>Friday the 13th game</b> for the Amstrad CPC, \nCommodore 64, and ZX Spectrum. The plot involved ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (franchise)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>. Original <b>release</b> dates: 1985 – <b>Release</b> date ... <b>Friday the 13th</b>: \nThe <b>Game</b>. Original <b>release</b> dates: 2017 – <b>Release</b> ...",
"title": "List of Friday the 13th media"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: The Computer <b>Game</b> is the first <b>game</b> adaptation based on the \nfilms of the same name. It was <b>released</b> in 1985 by Domark for the Amstrad CPC,\n ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1985 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a 2009 American slasher film directed by Marcus Nispel and \nwritten by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift from a screen story by Shannon, \nSwift ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (2009 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "The list of video <b>games</b> notable for negative reception includes <b>games</b> that won \nironic and ... While getting decent reviews when <b>released</b>, the <b>game</b> gained \nlargely ... In its September 2009 issue, <b>Game</b> Informer listed <b>Friday the 13th</b> as \nbeing ...",
"title": "List of video games notable for negative reception"
},
{
"snippet": "Jason Voorhees is the main character from the <b>Friday the 13th</b> series. He first \nappeared in ... On May 13, 2005, Avatar Press began <b>releasing</b> new <b>Friday the</b> \n<b>13th</b> comics. The first, titled ... Jason also appears as a playable character in the \nfighting <b>game</b> Mortal Kombat X as a downloadable content bonus character. A \nnew ...",
"title": "Jason Voorhees"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a 1980 American slasher film produced and directed by Sean S\n. Cunningham, written by Victor Miller, and starring Betsy Palmer, Adrienne ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1980 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "In the years since its <b>release</b>, its self-referential humor and numerous instances \nof ... In the "Tommy Tapes" for <b>Friday the 13th</b>: The <b>Game</b> (2017) written by Adam\n ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives"
}
]
},
{
"query": "friday the 13th the game",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th: The Game</b> is a survival horror video game formerly developed by \nIllFonic, and published by Gun Media. It is based on the film franchise of the ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: The Game"
},
{
"snippet": "Main articles: Friday the 13th (1985 video game), Friday the 13th (1989 video \ngame), <b>Friday the 13th: The Game</b>, and Friday the ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (franchise)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a survival horror video <b>game</b> published by LJN and developed \nby Japanese video <b>game</b> developer Atlus for the Nintendo Entertainment ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1989 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: The Computer <b>Game</b> is the first <b>game</b> adaptation based on the \nfilms of the same name. It was released in 1985 by Domark for the Amstrad CPC,\n ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1985 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "The characters featured in <b>Friday the 13th: The Game</b> include a total of 14 camp \ncounselors, nine variations of Jason Voorhees, as well as Tommy Jarvis.",
"title": "List of Friday the 13th: The Game characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "Video <b>games</b> based on <b>Friday the 13th</b> (franchise)". The \nfollowing 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent\n ...",
"title": "Category:Video games based on Friday the 13th (franchise ..."
},
{
"snippet": "Friday the 13th is an unlucky day in western superstition. Friday the 13th may \nalso refer to: ... Friday the 13th: The Series, a television series; Friday the 13th (\n1985 video game) · Friday the 13th (1989 video game) · <b>Friday the 13th: The</b> \n<b>Game</b> ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (disambiguation)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: Killer Puzzle is a 2018 horror puzzle video <b>game</b> for iOS, Android\n, Steam, and Nintendo Switch developed by Blue Wizard Digital. Released on ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: Killer Puzzle"
},
{
"snippet": "Jason Voorhees is the main character from the Friday the 13th series. He first \nappeared in ... On October 13, 2006, a <b>Friday the 13th game</b> was released for \nmobile phones. The game puts the user in the persona of Jason as he battles the\n ...",
"title": "Jason Voorhees"
},
{
"snippet": "Friday the 13th. Original release dates: 1985 – Release date. Friday the 13th. \nOriginal ... <b>Friday the 13th: The Game</b>. Original ...",
"title": "List of Friday the 13th media"
}
]
},
{
"query": " friday the 13th",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is an American horror franchise that comprises twelve slasher \nfilms, a television series, novels, comic books, video games, and tie‑in ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (franchise)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a 1980 American slasher film produced and directed by Sean S\n. Cunningham, written by Victor Miller, and starring Betsy Palmer, Adrienne ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1980 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is considered an unlucky day in Western superstition. It occurs \nwhen the 13th day of the month in the Gregorian calendar falls on a Friday, which\n ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a 2009 American slasher film directed by Marcus Nispel and \nwritten by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift from a screen story by Shannon, \nSwift ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (2009 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: The Series is an American-Canadian fantasy horror television \nseries that ran for three seasons, from October 3, 1987 to May 26, 1990 in first-\nrun ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: The Series"
},
{
"snippet": "Jason Voorhees is the main character from the <b>Friday the 13th</b> series. He first \nappeared in <b>Friday the 13th</b> (1980) as the young son of camp cook-turned-killer ...",
"title": "Jason Voorhees"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a survival horror video game published by LJN and developed \nby Japanese video game developer Atlus for the Nintendo Entertainment ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1989 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: The Final Chapter is a 1984 American slasher film directed by \nJoseph Zito, produced by Frank Mancuso Jr., and starring Kimberly Beck, Corey ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> Part 2 is a 1981 American slasher film produced and directed by \nSteve Miner in his directorial debut, written by Ron Kurz, and starring Amy Steel ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th Part 2"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: A New Beginning (also known as <b>Friday the 13th</b> Part V: A New \nBeginning) is a 1985 American slasher film directed by Danny Steinmann and ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: A New Beginning"
}
]
},
{
"query": " friday the 13th game",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: The <b>Game</b> is a survival horror video <b>game</b> formerly developed by \nIllFonic, and published by Gun Media. It is based on the film franchise of the ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: The Game"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is a survival horror video <b>game</b> published by LJN and developed \nby Japanese video <b>game</b> developer Atlus for the Nintendo Entertainment ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1989 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "In May 1986, Domark released a <b>Friday the 13th game</b> for the ... In 2007, Xendex \nreleased their own <b>Friday the 13th game</b> for ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (franchise)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: The Computer <b>Game</b> is the first <b>game</b> adaptation based on the \nfilms of the same name. It was released in 1985 by Domark for the Amstrad CPC,\n ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (1985 video game)"
},
{
"snippet": "The characters featured in <b>Friday the 13th</b>: The <b>Game</b> include a total of 14 camp \ncounselors, nine variations of Jason Voorhees, as well as Tommy Jarvis.",
"title": "List of Friday the 13th: The Game characters"
},
{
"snippet": "Pages in category "Video <b>games</b> based on <b>Friday the 13th</b> (franchise)". The \nfollowing 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent\n ...",
"title": "Category:Video games based on Friday the 13th (franchise ..."
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is considered an unlucky day in Western superstition. It occurs \nwhen the 13th day of the month in the Gregorian calendar falls on a Friday, which\n ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th"
},
{
"snippet": "Jason Voorhees is the main character from the Friday the 13th series. He first \nappeared in ... On October 13, 2006, a <b>Friday the 13th game</b> was released for \nmobile phones. The game puts the user in the persona of Jason as he battles the\n ...",
"title": "Jason Voorhees"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b> is an unlucky day in western superstition. <b>Friday the 13th</b> may \nalso refer to: ... <b>Friday the 13th</b>: The Series, a television series; <b>Friday the 13th</b> (\n1985 video <b>game</b>) · <b>Friday the 13th</b> (1989 video <b>game</b>) · <b>Friday the 13th</b>: The \n<b>Game</b> ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th (disambiguation)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Friday the 13th</b>: Killer Puzzle is a 2018 horror puzzle video <b>game</b> for iOS, Android\n, Steam, and Nintendo Switch developed by Blue Wizard Digital. Released on ...",
"title": "Friday the 13th: Killer Puzzle"
}
]
}
] |
Who was the british general who surrendered at yorktown? | 860154424532315603 | Siege of Yorktown | [
"Charles Cornwallis"
] | [
"Charles O'Hara",
"Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis",
"Siege of Yorktown",
"Surrender of Lord Cornwallis"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis",
"His Excellency General The Most Honourable The Marquess Cornwallis KG PC",
"Viscount Brome",
"The Earl Cornwallis",
"Charles Cornwallis",
"Lord Cornwallis",
"Lieutenant General Charles Cornwallis"
],
"question": "Who was the British general who signed surrender documents at Yorktown?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Charles O'Hara",
"Brigadier General Charles O'Hara",
"General O'Hara",
"General Charles O'Hara"
],
"question": "Who was the British general who attended the surrender ceremony at Yorktown?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who was the british general who surrendered at yorktown?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The fire on <b>Yorktown</b> from the allies was heavier than ever as new ... Instead, \nBrigadier <b>General</b> Charles O'Hara led the <b>British</b> ...",
"title": "Siege of Yorktown"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>General</b> Charles O'Hara (1740 – 25 February 1802) was a <b>British</b> military officer \nwho served in the Seven Years' War, American War of Independence, and \nFrench Revolutionary War, and later served as Governor of Gibraltar. During his \ncareer O'Hara personally <b>surrendered</b> to both George Washington ... <b>General</b> O'\nHara represented the <b>British</b> at the <b>surrender</b> of <b>Yorktown</b> on 19 ...",
"title": "Charles O'Hara"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Surrender</b> of Lord Cornwallis is an oil painting by John Trumbull. The \npainting was completed in 1820, and hangs in the rotunda of the United States \nCapitol in Washington, D. C.. The painting depicts the <b>surrender</b> of <b>British</b> \nLieutenant <b>General</b> Charles, Earl Cornwallis at <b>Yorktown</b>, ...",
"title": "Surrender of Lord Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": ""The World Turned Upside Down" is an English ballad. It was first published on a \nbroadside in ... According to American legend, the <b>British</b> army band under Lord \nCornwallis played this tune when they <b>surrendered</b> after the Siege of <b>Yorktown</b> (\n1781). Customarily, the <b>British</b> army would have played an American or French ...",
"title": "The World Turned Upside Down"
},
{
"snippet": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis, KG, PC (31 December 1738 – 5 \nOctober 1805), styled Viscount Brome between 1753 and 1762 and known as \nThe Earl Cornwallis between 1762 and 1792, was a <b>British</b> Army <b>general</b> and \nofficial. ... Cornwallis <b>surrendered</b> his army at <b>Yorktown</b> in October 1781 after an ...",
"title": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": "The Siege of <b>Yorktown</b> was the culminating act of the <b>Yorktown</b> campaign, a \nseries of military operations occupying much of 1781 during the American \nRevolutionary War. The siege was a decisive Franco-American victory: after the \n<b>surrender</b> of <b>British</b> Lt. Gen. ... The third detachment to arrive was that of <b>General</b> \nCornwallis, who had been ...",
"title": "Yorktown order of battle"
},
{
"snippet": "The military career of Benedict Arnold in 1781 consisted of service in the <b>British</b> \nArmy. Arnold had changed sides in September 1780, after his plot was exposed \nto surrender the key Continental Army outpost at ... <b>General</b> Cornwallis had been \nreleased on parole after his <b>surrender at Yorktown</b>, and he and Arnold sailed for\n ...",
"title": "Military career of Benedict Arnold, 1781"
},
{
"snippet": "The Southern theater of the American Revolutionary War was the central theater \nof military ... The culminating engagement, the Siege of <b>Yorktown</b>, ended with the \n<b>surrender</b> of <b>British General</b> Lord Cornwallis on October 19, 1781.",
"title": "Southern theater of the American Revolutionary War"
},
{
"snippet": "Charles, Earl Cornwallis (1738–1805) was a military officer who served in the \n<b>British</b> Army during the American War of Independence. He is best known for \n<b>surrendering</b> his army after the 1781 Siege of <b>Yorktown</b>, ... He and <b>General</b> \nClinton engaged in a highly public exchange after the 1781 campaign in which \neach sought ...",
"title": "Cornwallis in North America"
},
{
"snippet": "When negotiating the <b>surrender</b> of a <b>British</b> army at <b>Yorktown</b> a year later, \nAmerican <b>General</b> George Washington insisted: "The same Honors will be \ngranted to ...",
"title": "Honours of war"
}
]
},
{
"query": "british general surrendered at yorktown",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The fire on <b>Yorktown</b> from the allies was heavier than ever as new ... Instead, \nBrigadier <b>General</b> Charles O'Hara led the <b>British</b> ...",
"title": "Siege of Yorktown"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>General</b> Charles O'Hara (1740 – 25 February 1802) was a <b>British</b> military officer \nwho served in the Seven Years' War, American War of Independence, and \nFrench Revolutionary War, and later served as Governor of Gibraltar. During his \ncareer O'Hara personally <b>surrendered</b> to both George Washington ... <b>General</b> O'\nHara represented the <b>British</b> at the <b>surrender</b> of <b>Yorktown</b> on 19 ...",
"title": "Charles O'Hara"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Surrender</b> of Lord Cornwallis is an oil painting by John Trumbull. The \npainting was completed in 1820, and hangs in the rotunda of the United States \nCapitol in Washington, D. C.. The painting depicts the <b>surrender</b> of <b>British</b> \nLieutenant <b>General</b> Charles, Earl Cornwallis at <b>Yorktown</b>, ...",
"title": "Surrender of Lord Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": ""The World Turned Upside Down" is an English ballad. It was first published on a \nbroadside in ... According to American legend, the <b>British</b> army band under Lord \nCornwallis played this tune when they <b>surrendered</b> after the Siege of <b>Yorktown</b> (\n1781). Customarily, the <b>British</b> army would have played an American or French ...",
"title": "The World Turned Upside Down"
},
{
"snippet": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis, KG, PC (31 December 1738 – 5 \nOctober 1805), styled Viscount Brome between 1753 and 1762 and known as \nThe Earl Cornwallis between 1762 and 1792, was a <b>British</b> Army <b>general</b> and \nofficial. ... Cornwallis <b>surrendered</b> his army at <b>Yorktown</b> in October 1781 after an ...",
"title": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": "The Siege of <b>Yorktown</b> was the culminating act of the <b>Yorktown</b> campaign, a \nseries of military operations occupying much of 1781 during the American \nRevolutionary War. The siege was a decisive Franco-American victory: after the \n<b>surrender</b> of <b>British</b> Lt. Gen. ... The third detachment to arrive was that of <b>General</b> \nCornwallis, who had been ...",
"title": "Yorktown order of battle"
},
{
"snippet": "The military career of Benedict Arnold in 1781 consisted of service in the <b>British</b> \nArmy. Arnold had changed sides in September 1780, after his plot was exposed \nto surrender the key Continental Army outpost at ... <b>General</b> Cornwallis had been \nreleased on parole after his <b>surrender at Yorktown</b>, and he and Arnold sailed for\n ...",
"title": "Military career of Benedict Arnold, 1781"
},
{
"snippet": "When negotiating the <b>surrender</b> of a <b>British</b> army at <b>Yorktown</b> a year later, \nAmerican <b>General</b> George Washington insisted: "The same Honors will be \ngranted to ...",
"title": "Honours of war"
},
{
"snippet": "The Southern theater of the American Revolutionary War was the central theater \nof military ... The culminating engagement, the Siege of <b>Yorktown</b>, ended with the \n<b>surrender</b> of <b>British General</b> Lord Cornwallis on October 19, 1781.",
"title": "Southern theater of the American Revolutionary War"
},
{
"snippet": "François Joseph Paul, comte de Grasse (13 September 1722 – 11 January 1788) \nwas a career ... It led directly to the <b>British surrender at Yorktown</b> and helped gain \nthe rebels' victory. ... Grasse was promoted to lieutenant-<b>general</b> of the Navy (\nequivalent to vice-admiral) in March 1781, and was successful in defeating ...",
"title": "François Joseph Paul de Grasse"
}
]
},
{
"query": "british general who surrendered at yorktown",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The fire on <b>Yorktown</b> from the allies was heavier than ever as new ... Instead, \nBrigadier <b>General</b> Charles O'Hara led the <b>British</b> ...",
"title": "Siege of Yorktown"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>General</b> Charles O'Hara (1740 – 25 February 1802) was a <b>British</b> military officer \nwho served in the Seven Years' War, American War of Independence, and \nFrench Revolutionary War, and later served as Governor of Gibraltar. During his \ncareer O'Hara personally <b>surrendered</b> to both George Washington ... <b>General</b> O'\nHara represented the <b>British</b> at the <b>surrender</b> of <b>Yorktown</b> on 19 ...",
"title": "Charles O'Hara"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Surrender</b> of Lord Cornwallis is an oil painting by John Trumbull. The \npainting was completed in 1820, and hangs in the rotunda of the United States \nCapitol in Washington, D. C.. The painting depicts the <b>surrender</b> of <b>British</b> \nLieutenant <b>General</b> Charles, Earl Cornwallis at <b>Yorktown</b>, ...",
"title": "Surrender of Lord Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": ""The World Turned Upside Down" is an English ballad. It was first published on a \nbroadside in ... According to American legend, the <b>British</b> army band under Lord \nCornwallis played this tune when they <b>surrendered</b> after the Siege of <b>Yorktown</b> (\n1781). Customarily, the <b>British</b> army would have played an American or French ...",
"title": "The World Turned Upside Down"
},
{
"snippet": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis, KG, PC (31 December 1738 – 5 \nOctober 1805), styled Viscount Brome between 1753 and 1762 and known as \nThe Earl Cornwallis between 1762 and 1792, was a <b>British</b> Army <b>general</b> and \nofficial. ... Cornwallis <b>surrendered</b> his army at <b>Yorktown</b> in October 1781 after an ...",
"title": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": "The Siege of <b>Yorktown</b> was the culminating act of the <b>Yorktown</b> campaign, a \nseries of military operations occupying much of 1781 during the American \nRevolutionary War. The siege was a decisive Franco-American victory: after the \n<b>surrender</b> of <b>British</b> Lt. Gen. ... The third detachment to arrive was that of <b>General</b> \nCornwallis, who had been ...",
"title": "Yorktown order of battle"
},
{
"snippet": "The military career of Benedict Arnold in 1781 consisted of service in the <b>British</b> \nArmy. Arnold had changed sides in September 1780, after his plot was exposed \nto surrender the key Continental Army outpost at ... <b>General</b> Cornwallis had been \nreleased on parole after his <b>surrender at Yorktown</b>, and he and Arnold sailed for\n ...",
"title": "Military career of Benedict Arnold, 1781"
},
{
"snippet": "The Southern theater of the American Revolutionary War was the central theater \nof military ... The culminating engagement, the Siege of <b>Yorktown</b>, ended with the \n<b>surrender</b> of <b>British General</b> Lord Cornwallis on October 19, 1781.",
"title": "Southern theater of the American Revolutionary War"
},
{
"snippet": "When negotiating the <b>surrender</b> of a <b>British</b> army at <b>Yorktown</b> a year later, \nAmerican <b>General</b> George Washington insisted: "The same Honors will be \ngranted to ...",
"title": "Honours of war"
},
{
"snippet": "François Joseph Paul, comte de Grasse (13 September 1722 – 11 January 1788) \nwas a career ... It led directly to the <b>British surrender at Yorktown</b> and helped gain \nthe rebels' victory. ... Grasse was promoted to lieutenant-<b>general</b> of the Navy (\nequivalent to vice-admiral) in March 1781, and was successful in defeating ...",
"title": "François Joseph Paul de Grasse"
}
]
},
{
"query": "british surrender revolutionary war",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The fire on <b>Yorktown</b> from the allies was heavier than ever as new ... Cornwallis' \n<b>British</b> men were declared prisoners of war, ...",
"title": "Siege of Yorktown"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>Surrender</b> of Lord Cornwallis is an oil painting by John Trumbull. The \npainting was completed in 1820, and hangs in the rotunda of the United States \nCapitol in Washington, D. C.. The painting depicts the <b>surrender</b> of <b>British</b> \nLieutenant General Charles, Earl Cornwallis at <b>Yorktown</b>, ...",
"title": "Surrender of Lord Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": "The Battles of Saratoga (September 19 and October 7, 1777) marked the climax \nof the Saratoga campaign, giving a decisive victory to the Americans over the \n<b>British</b> in the American <b>Revolutionary War</b>. ... News of Burgoyne's <b>surrender</b> was \ninstrumental in formally bringing France into the war as an American ally, \nalthough it ...",
"title": "Battles of Saratoga"
},
{
"snippet": "General Charles O'Hara (1740 – 25 February 1802) was a <b>British</b> military officer \nwho served in the Seven Years' War, American War of Independence, and \nFrench <b>Revolutionary War</b>, and later served as Governor of Gibraltar. During his \ncareer O'Hara personally <b>surrendered</b> to both George Washington ...",
"title": "Charles O'Hara"
},
{
"snippet": ""The World Turned Upside Down" is an English ballad. It was first published on a \nbroadside in ... According to American legend, the <b>British</b> army band under Lord \nCornwallis played this tune when they <b>surrendered</b> after the Siege of <b>Yorktown</b> (\n1781). Customarily, the <b>British</b> army would have played an American or French ...",
"title": "The World Turned Upside Down"
},
{
"snippet": "Benjamin Lincoln was an American army officer. He served as a major general in \nthe Continental Army during the American <b>Revolutionary War</b>. Lincoln was \ninvolved in three major <b>surrenders</b> during the war: his ... and, as George \nWashington's second in command, he formally accepted the <b>British surrender</b> at \n<b>Yorktown</b>.",
"title": "Benjamin Lincoln"
},
{
"snippet": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis, KG, PC (31 December 1738 – 5 \nOctober 1805), ... Cornwallis <b>surrendered</b> his army at <b>Yorktown</b> in October 1781 \nafter an extended campaign through the Southern states, marked ... Returning to \n<b>Britain</b> in 1794, Cornwallis was given the post of Master-General of the Ordnance\n.",
"title": "Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis"
},
{
"snippet": "The siege of Charleston was a major engagement and major <b>British</b> victory, \nfought between March 29 to May 12, 1780, during the American <b>Revolutionary</b> \n<b>War</b>. ... to deny the same to the <b>British</b> during their <b>surrender</b> at the Siege of \n<b>Yorktown</b>.",
"title": "Siege of Charleston"
},
{
"snippet": "Benedict Arnold was an American military officer who served as a general during \nthe American <b>Revolutionary War</b>, fighting for the American Continental Army \nbefore defecting to the <b>British</b> ... Arnold planned to <b>surrender</b> the fort to <b>British</b> \nforces, but the plot was discovered in September 1780 and he fled to the <b>British</b>.",
"title": "Benedict Arnold"
},
{
"snippet": "The Siege of Fort Vincennes was a <b>Revolutionary War</b> frontier battle fought in \npresent-day Vincennes, Indiana won by a militia led by American commander \nGeorge Rogers Clark over a <b>British</b> garrison led by Lieutenant Governor Henry \nHamilton. ... force the <b>British</b> to <b>surrender</b> the fort and in a larger frame the Illinois \nterritory.",
"title": "Siege of Fort Vincennes"
}
]
}
] |
When do the summer holidays start for schools? | 8643122201694054820 | Summer vacation | [
"between late May and mid-June"
] | [
"Category:Summer holidays",
"Summer vacation",
"School holidays in the United States"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"end of June",
"between late-May and mid-June",
"Between late-May and mid-June",
"between late May and mid-June"
],
"question": "When do summer holidays start for schools in the US?|When do summer holidays start for schools in the US ?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Last Saturday in June."
],
"question": "When do summer holidays start for schools in Canada?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Early to mid-December"
],
"question": "When do summer holidays start for schools in Argentina?"
},
{
"answer": [
"May"
],
"question": "When do summer holidays start for schools in the southern US?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "When do the summer holidays start for schools",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Summer vacation is</b> a <b>school break</b> in <b>summer</b> between <b>school</b> years and the \n<b>break</b> in the ... This <b>is</b> slightly odd for <b>schools</b> to open before the <b>summer</b> solstice \n<b>begins</b>. Also, it <b>is</b> becoming difficult for children to attend <b>school</b> in high ...",
"title": "Summer vacation"
},
{
"snippet": "In the United States and possibly other places, the academic year typically has \nabout 180 <b>school</b> days for K-12, running from the early (Northern Hemisphere) \nfall to early <b>summer</b>. colleges and universities often have shorter years. <b>School</b> \n<b>holidays</b> (also referred to as vacations, breaks, and recess) <b>are</b> the ... <b>Schools</b> \noffering voluntary <b>summer</b> camp also observe a <b>holiday</b> on ...",
"title": "School holidays in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "An academic year or <b>school</b> year <b>is</b> a period of time which <b>schools</b>, colleges and \nuniversities ... In most countries, the longest <b>break</b> in the <b>school</b> year <b>is</b> during \n<b>summer</b>, lasting between 5 and 14 weeks. In Ireland, Italy ... Brazil[edit]. In Brazil, \n<b>summer holidays start</b> in early December and end in late January or early \nFebruary.",
"title": "Academic year"
},
{
"snippet": "The English <b>school</b> year generally runs from early September to mid or late July \nof the following ... The <b>summer holiday begins</b> in late July, and <b>is</b> usually about \nsix weeks long. The local education authority sets the <b>holiday dates</b> for all \n<b>schools</b> ...",
"title": "English school holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "French <b>school holidays are</b> the periods when <b>schools</b> in France, and all the \npupils in them, have a <b>holiday</b>. The <b>dates are</b> fixed nationally by the Ministry of \nEducation for a period of three years. <b>Holiday dates are</b> given as a Saturday date \n"after classes", as some <b>schools</b> ... The <b>summer holidays</b> officially <b>begins</b> in early \nJuly[1] for all state <b>schools</b> and ...",
"title": "French school holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "An academic term (or simply term) <b>is</b> a portion of an academic year, the time \nduring which an educational institution holds classes. The schedules adopted \nvary widely. In most countries, the academic year <b>begins</b> in late <b>summer</b> or early \nautumn ... <b>Summer break</b>: <b>is</b> always the <b>break</b> from the 1st of July until the 31st of \nAugust ...",
"title": "Academic term"
},
{
"snippet": "The first day of <b>school is</b> the first day of an academic year. This <b>is</b> usually in \nAugust or ... Therefore, there <b>is</b> no one particular day on which all <b>schools start</b>. \nDuring much ... In India the <b>schools</b> re-open in June after <b>summer holidays</b>. This \napplies ...",
"title": "First day of school"
},
{
"snippet": "In almost all countries, children <b>are</b> out of <b>school</b> during this time of year for \n<b>summer break</b>, although <b>dates</b> vary. In the United ...",
"title": "Summer"
},
{
"snippet": "Education in the Czech Republic includes elementary <b>school</b>, secondary <b>school</b>, \nand ... Elementary <b>school is</b> mandatory for children from ages six to fifteen. ... The \n<b>school</b> year <b>starts</b> on the first weekday of September and ends on the last ... from \n1 February to 30 June, separated by a one-day <b>break</b> and the <b>summer holidays</b>.",
"title": "Education in the Czech Republic"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>summer</b> camp or sleepaway camp <b>is</b> a supervised program for children or \nteenagers conducted during the <b>summer</b> months in some countries. Children and \nadolescents who attend <b>summer</b> camp <b>are</b> known as campers. <b>Summer school is</b> \nusually a required academic curriculum for a student to ... The UK <b>school summer</b> \n<b>holiday is</b> shorter, typically six weeks for state <b>schools</b> ...",
"title": "Summer camp"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When do the summer holidays start for schools in canada",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Summer vacation is</b> a <b>school break</b> in <b>summer</b> between <b>school</b> years and the \n<b>break</b> in the ... <b>Summer holidays</b> in Japan <b>start</b> from late-July until early-\nSeptember. ... In <b>Canada</b>, the first day of <b>summer vacation</b> for public <b>schools is</b> \nthe last ...",
"title": "Summer vacation"
},
{
"snippet": "An academic year or <b>school</b> year <b>is</b> a period of time which <b>schools</b>, <b>colleges</b> and \n<b>universities</b> ... In most countries, the longest <b>break</b> in the <b>school</b> year <b>is</b> during \n<b>summer</b>, ... In Brazil, <b>summer holidays start</b> in early December and end in late \nJanuary or ... In Ontario, <b>Canada's</b> largest province, spring <b>break is</b> a four-day-\nlong ...",
"title": "Academic year"
},
{
"snippet": "An academic term (or simply term) <b>is</b> a portion of an academic year, the time \nduring which an <b>educational</b> institution holds classes. The schedules adopted \nvary widely. In most countries, the academic year <b>begins</b> in late <b>summer</b> or early \nautumn ... <b>Summer break</b>: <b>is</b> always the <b>break</b> from the 1st of July until the 31st of \nAugust ...",
"title": "Academic term"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Schools</b> and <b>universities</b> typically have a <b>summer break</b> to take ... <b>are</b> out of \n<b>school</b> during this time of year for <b>summer break</b>, although <b>dates</b> vary. ... Similarly\n, in <b>Canada</b> the <b>summer holiday starts</b> on the last or ...",
"title": "Summer"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>summer</b> camp or sleepaway camp <b>is</b> a supervised <b>program</b> for children or \nteenagers ... Typically, <b>colleges</b> in the United States and <b>Canada</b> offer these \n<b>programs</b>, ... In recent years, <b>programs</b> have <b>started</b> that <b>are</b> open to kids from \ndifferent ... The UK <b>school summer holiday is</b> shorter, typically six weeks for state \n<b>schools</b>.",
"title": "Summer camp"
},
{
"snippet": "The English <b>school</b> year generally runs from early September to mid or late July \nof the following ... The <b>summer holiday begins</b> in late July, and <b>is</b> usually about \nsix weeks long. The local education authority sets the <b>holiday dates</b> for all \n<b>schools</b> ...",
"title": "English school holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "Labour Day <b>is</b> an annual <b>holiday</b> to celebrate the achievements of workers. \nLabour Day has its ... In <b>Canada</b> and the United States, the <b>holiday is</b> celebrated \non the first ... of <b>summer</b>, with <b>summer</b> vacations ending and students returning <b>to</b> \n<b>school</b> ... Labour Day in Australia <b>is</b> a public <b>holiday</b> on <b>dates</b> which vary \nbetween ...",
"title": "Labour Day"
},
{
"snippet": "The first day of <b>school is</b> the first day of an academic year. This <b>is</b> usually in \nAugust or ... Therefore, there <b>is</b> no one particular day on which all <b>schools start</b>. ... \nmonth of March or April and new academic year <b>starts</b> in June after <b>summer</b> \n<b>holidays</b>.",
"title": "First day of school"
},
{
"snippet": "The Christmas season, also called the <b>holiday</b> season or the festive season, <b>is</b> an \nannually ... In the Christian tradition, the Christmas season <b>is</b> a period <b>beginning</b> \non ... According to a survey by the <b>Canadian</b> Toy Association, peak sales in the \ntoy ... Public <b>schools are</b> subject to what the Anti-Defamation League terms the ...",
"title": "Christmas and holiday season"
},
{
"snippet": "Civic <b>Holiday is</b> the most widely used name for a public <b>holiday</b> celebrated in \nmost of <b>Canada</b> ... must treat as a <b>holiday</b> and it <b>is</b> not mentioned in Ontario's \nEmployment Standards Act nor the Retail Business <b>Holidays</b> Act. <b>Schools are</b> \ngenerally already closed, regardless of the <b>holiday's</b> status, because of <b>summer</b> \n<b>vacation</b>.",
"title": "Civic Holiday"
}
]
},
{
"query": "summer holidays ",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Modern and ancient <b>holidays</b> considered culturally integral to the <b>Summer</b> \nseason. For local festivals see the list of local <b>Summer</b> festivals. See also ...",
"title": "Category:Summer holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Summer vacation</b> is a school break in summer between school years and the \nbreak in the school academic year. Students are typically off between eight and ...",
"title": "Summer vacation"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Summer Holiday</b> is a British CinemaScope and Technicolor musical film featuring \nsinger Cliff Richard. The film was directed by Peter Yates (his directorial debut) ...",
"title": "Summer Holiday (1963 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "An academic year or school year is a period of time which schools, colleges and \nuniversities ... <b>Summer holidays</b> for most children are a time to relax, enjoy \nthemselves, and catch up on studies, or to spend time with family or relatives.",
"title": "Academic year"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>summer holidays</b> officially begins in early July[1] for all state schools and all \nstudents, whatever their age or type of school ...",
"title": "French school holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "A wide range of public <b>holidays</b> fall during <b>summer</b>, including: Memorial Day (\nUnited States) or Victoria Day (Canada) through ...",
"title": "Summer"
},
{
"snippet": "Annual leave is paid time off work granted by employers to employees to be used \nfor whatever ... Some countries, such as Denmark and Italy, or particular \ncompanies may mandate <b>summer holidays</b> in specific periods. Argentina has \ndifferent ...",
"title": "Annual leave"
},
{
"snippet": "In the United States and possibly other places, the academic year typically has \nabout 180 school days for K-12, running from the early (Northern Hemisphere) \nfall to early <b>summer</b>. colleges ...",
"title": "School holidays in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "The English school year generally runs from early September to mid or late July \nof the following ... The <b>summer holiday</b> begins in late July, and is usually about \nsix weeks long. The local education authority sets the holiday dates for all \nschools ...",
"title": "English school holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "In the United Kingdom, public <b>holidays</b> are days on which most businesses and \nnon-essential ... Last Monday in August, Late <b>Summer</b> Bank <b>Holiday</b>, Statutory \nbank <b>holiday</b> from 1971, following a trial period from 1965 to 1971. Replaced the\n ...",
"title": "Public holidays in the United Kingdom"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When do the summer holidays start for schools?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Summer vacation is</b> a <b>school break</b> in <b>summer</b> between <b>school</b> years and the \n<b>break</b> in the ... This <b>is</b> slightly odd for <b>schools</b> to open before the <b>summer</b> solstice \n<b>begins</b>. Also, it <b>is</b> becoming difficult for children to attend <b>school</b> in high ...",
"title": "Summer vacation"
},
{
"snippet": "In the United States and possibly other places, the academic year typically has \nabout 180 <b>school</b> days for K-12, running from the early (Northern Hemisphere) \nfall to early <b>summer</b>. colleges and universities often have shorter years. <b>School</b> \n<b>holidays</b> (also referred to as vacations, breaks, and recess) <b>are</b> the ... <b>Schools</b> \noffering voluntary <b>summer</b> camp also observe a <b>holiday</b> on ...",
"title": "School holidays in the United States"
},
{
"snippet": "An academic year or <b>school</b> year <b>is</b> a period of time which <b>schools</b>, colleges and \nuniversities ... In most countries, the longest <b>break</b> in the <b>school</b> year <b>is</b> during \n<b>summer</b>, lasting between 5 and 14 weeks. In Ireland, Italy ... Brazil[edit]. In Brazil, \n<b>summer holidays start</b> in early December and end in late January or early \nFebruary.",
"title": "Academic year"
},
{
"snippet": "The English <b>school</b> year generally runs from early September to mid or late July \nof the following ... The <b>summer holiday begins</b> in late July, and <b>is</b> usually about \nsix weeks long. The local education authority sets the <b>holiday dates</b> for all \n<b>schools</b> ...",
"title": "English school holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "French <b>school holidays are</b> the periods when <b>schools</b> in France, and all the \npupils in them, have a <b>holiday</b>. The <b>dates are</b> fixed nationally by the Ministry of \nEducation for a period of three years. <b>Holiday dates are</b> given as a Saturday date \n"after classes", as some <b>schools</b> ... The <b>summer holidays</b> officially <b>begins</b> in early \nJuly[1] for all state <b>schools</b> and ...",
"title": "French school holidays"
},
{
"snippet": "An academic term (or simply term) <b>is</b> a portion of an academic year, the time \nduring which an educational institution holds classes. The schedules adopted \nvary widely. In most countries, the academic year <b>begins</b> in late <b>summer</b> or early \nautumn ... <b>Summer break</b>: <b>is</b> always the <b>break</b> from the 1st of July until the 31st of \nAugust ...",
"title": "Academic term"
},
{
"snippet": "The first day of <b>school is</b> the first day of an academic year. This <b>is</b> usually in \nAugust or ... Therefore, there <b>is</b> no one particular day on which all <b>schools start</b>. \nDuring much ... In India the <b>schools</b> re-open in June after <b>summer holidays</b>. This \napplies ...",
"title": "First day of school"
},
{
"snippet": "In almost all countries, children <b>are</b> out of <b>school</b> during this time of year for \n<b>summer break</b>, although <b>dates</b> vary. In the United ...",
"title": "Summer"
},
{
"snippet": "Education in the Czech Republic includes elementary <b>school</b>, secondary <b>school</b>, \nand ... Elementary <b>school is</b> mandatory for children from ages six to fifteen. ... The \n<b>school</b> year <b>starts</b> on the first weekday of September and ends on the last ... from \n1 February to 30 June, separated by a one-day <b>break</b> and the <b>summer holidays</b>.",
"title": "Education in the Czech Republic"
},
{
"snippet": "A <b>summer</b> camp or sleepaway camp <b>is</b> a supervised program for children or \nteenagers conducted during the <b>summer</b> months in some countries. Children and \nadolescents who attend <b>summer</b> camp <b>are</b> known as campers. <b>Summer school is</b> \nusually a required academic curriculum for a student to ... The UK <b>school summer</b> \n<b>holiday is</b> shorter, typically six weeks for state <b>schools</b> ...",
"title": "Summer camp"
}
]
}
] |
Who is the band in the movie 10 things i hate about you? | 9033094464364994905 | 10 Things I Hate About You | [
"Save Ferris"
] | [
"10 Things I Hate About You"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Letters to Cleo"
],
"question": "What band plays at Club Skunk in the movie 10 Things I Hate About You?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Save Ferris"
],
"question": "What band plays at the prom in the movie 10 Things I Hate About You?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
},
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Letters to Cleo"
],
"question": "Who is the band at Club Skunk in the movie 10 things i hate about you?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Save Ferris"
],
"question": "Who is the band at the prom in the movie 10 things i hate about you?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
},
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"Letters to Cleo"
],
"question": "Who is the band that performs at Club Skunk in the movie 10 Things I Hate About You?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Save Ferris"
],
"question": "Who is the band that performs at the prom in the movie 10 Things I Hate About You?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "10 things i hate about you",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>10 Things I Hate About You</b> is a 1999 American romantic comedy film directed by \nGil Junger and starring Julia Stiles, Heath Ledger, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and ...",
"title": "10 Things I Hate About You"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>10 Things I Hate About You</b> is an American television sitcom broadcast on ABC \nFamily beginning in 2009. Developed by Carter Covington, the show is a ...",
"title": "10 Things I Hate About You (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "10 Things I Hate About Life is a cancelled/unfinished 2012 American romantic \ncomedy film ... producing the film; Andrew Lazar, who produced the original <b>10</b> \n<b>Things I Hate About You</b> in 1999, would re-assume that role for this film.",
"title": "10 Things I Hate About Life"
},
{
"snippet": "Stadium High School is a public high school in Tacoma, Washington, and a \nhistoric landmark. It is part of Tacoma Public Schools, or Tacoma School District \nNo. 10 and is located in the Stadium District, near downtown Tacoma. ... the \nfilming location for many of the scenes of the 1999 movie <b>10 Things I Hate About</b> \n<b>You</b>.",
"title": "Stadium High School"
},
{
"snippet": "|state=collapsed : {{<b>10 Things I Hate About You</b>|state=collapsed}} to show the \ntemplate collapsed, i.e., hidden apart from its title bar; |state=expanded : {{10 ...",
"title": "Template:10 Things I Hate About You"
},
{
"snippet": "Kathleen Marie Hanley (born September 11, 1968) is an American singer and \nsongwriter. ... In 1999, Hanley appeared as herself in the film <b>10 Things I Hate</b> \n<b>About You</b>, singing a cover version of Nick Lowe's "Cruel to Be Kind" at the movie\n ...",
"title": "Kay Hanley"
},
{
"snippet": ""Miley Cyrus' "7 Things" vs. <b>10 Things I Hate About You</b>". Paste. Paste Media \nGroup LLC. Archived from the original on 24 January 2010.",
"title": "7 Things"
},
{
"snippet": "This redirect is within the scope of WikiProject Albums, an attempt at building a \nuseful resource on recordings from a variety of genres. If <b>you</b> would like to ...",
"title": "Talk:10 Things I Hate About You (soundtrack)"
},
{
"snippet": "If <b>you</b> would like to participate, please visit the project page, where <b>you</b> can join \nthe discussion and see lists of open tasks and regional and topical task forces.",
"title": "Template talk:10 Things I Hate About You"
},
{
"snippet": "Heath Andrew Ledger (4 April 1979 – 22 January 2008) was an Australian actor, \nphotographer, ... His work comprised nineteen films, including <b>10 Things I Hate</b> \n<b>About You</b> (1999), The Patriot (2000), A Knight's Tale (2001), Monster's Ball ...",
"title": "Heath Ledger"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who is the band in the movie 10 things i hate about you?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>10 Things I Hate About You</b> is a 1999 American romantic comedy <b>film</b> directed by \nGil Junger ... The <b>band</b> Save Ferris (singer Monique Powell, guitarist Brian \nMashburn, bassist Bill Uechi, trumpeter José Castellaños, trombonist Brian \nWilliams, ...",
"title": "10 Things I Hate About You"
},
{
"snippet": "Kathleen Marie Hanley (born September 11, 1968) is an American singer and \nsongwriter. She is best known as the vocalist for the alternative rock <b>band</b> Letters \nto Cleo. ... In 1999, Hanley appeared as herself in the <b>film 10 Things I Hate About</b> \n<b>You</b>, singing a cover version of Nick Lowe's "Cruel to Be Kind" at the <b>movie</b> ...",
"title": "Kay Hanley"
},
{
"snippet": "Not Another Teen <b>Movie</b> is a 2001 American parody <b>film</b> directed by Joel Gallen \nand written by ... <b>10 Things I Hate About You</b>, Can't Hardly Wait, and Pretty in \nPink) to convince her to stay ... Good Charlotte as the <b>band</b> playing at the prom.",
"title": "Not Another Teen Movie"
},
{
"snippet": "Save Ferris is a ska punk <b>band</b> formed circa 1995 in Orange County, California. \nTheir name is a reference to the 1986 <b>film</b> Ferris Bueller's Day Off. In 1995, the \n<b>band</b> began to ... they made their television debut on HBO's music series Reverb \nand made an on-screen appearance in the teen <b>film</b>, <b>10 Things I Hate About You</b>.",
"title": "Save Ferris"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>10 Things I Hate About You</b> is an American television sitcom broadcast on ABC \nFamily ... same feel. Gil Junger, who directed the <b>movie</b>, also directed the pilot. ... \nKat finds out she and Patrick like the same <b>band</b> and he invites her to a concert.",
"title": "10 Things I Hate About You (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Heath Andrew Ledger (4 April 1979 – 22 January 2008) was an Australian actor, \nphotographer, and music video director. After performing roles in several \nAustralian television and <b>film</b> productions ... His work comprised nineteen films, \nincluding <b>10 Things I Hate About You</b> (1999), The Patriot (2000), A Knight's Tale (\n2001), ...",
"title": "Heath Ledger"
},
{
"snippet": ""One Week" is a song by the Canadian rock <b>band</b> Barenaked Ladies, and is the \nfirst single from ... featured numerous times in other media, including the films \nDigimon: The <b>Movie</b>, American Pie, <b>10 Things I Hate About You</b>, the <b>band</b> appear\n ...",
"title": "One Week (song)"
},
{
"snippet": "Letters to Cleo is an alternative rock <b>band</b> from Boston, Massachusetts, best \nknown for the 1994 ... Letters to Cleo appeared in the 1999 <b>film 10 Things I Hate</b> \n<b>about You</b> as a favorite <b>band</b> of the character portrayed by Julia Stiles.",
"title": "Letters to Cleo"
},
{
"snippet": ""I Want You to Want Me" is a song by the American rock <b>band</b> Cheap Trick. It is \noriginally from ... "I Want You to Want Me". Letters To Cleo.jpg. Single by Letters \nTo Cleo. from the album <b>10 Things I Hate About You</b>. Released, 1999 · Genre · \nRock. Length, 3: ...",
"title": "I Want You to Want Me"
},
{
"snippet": "Richard “Ribbs” Gibbs is an American <b>film</b> composer and music producer whose \ncredits include ... Gibbs was the keyboard player for the new wave <b>band</b> Oingo \nBoingo from 1980 to 1984. He was also a session player, ... Direct-to-video <b>film</b>. \n<b>10 Things I Hate About You</b> · Gil Junger · Touchstone Pictures, N/A. 2000, Big ...",
"title": "Richard Gibbs"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When is the second series of this is us?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "The <b>second season</b> of <b>the American</b> television <b>series</b> This Is <b>Us</b> continues to \nfollow the lives and connections of the Pearson family across several time \nperiods.",
"title": "This Is Us (season 2)"
},
{
"snippet": "The <b>series</b> follows the lives of siblings Kevin, Kate, and Randall (known ... \nBeginning in the <b>second season</b>, the show also uses ...",
"title": "This Is Us"
},
{
"snippet": "The third <b>season</b> of <b>the American</b> television <b>series</b> This Is <b>Us</b> continues to follow \nthe lives and ... A third <b>season</b> was ordered, alongside a <b>second season</b>, in \nJanuary 2017, with production for <b>season</b> three beginning in July 2018. The \n<b>season</b> ...",
"title": "This Is Us (season 3)"
},
{
"snippet": "The first <b>season</b> of <b>the American</b> television <b>series</b> This Is <b>Us</b> follows the family \nlives and ... Drama and the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Drama \n<b>Series</b>. The <b>series</b> was renewed for a <b>second</b> and third <b>season</b> on January 18, \n2017.",
"title": "This Is Us (season 1)"
},
{
"snippet": ""Super Bowl Sunday" is the fourteenth episode of the <b>second season</b> of <b>the</b> \n<b>American</b> television drama <b>series</b> This Is <b>Us</b>, and the thirty-<b>second</b> overall.",
"title": "Super Bowl Sunday (This Is Us)"
},
{
"snippet": "... to join the Pearson family Thanksgiving. Nicky as a child appears beginning in \nthe <b>second season</b>, as portrayed by ...",
"title": "List of This Is Us characters"
},
{
"snippet": "New Amsterdam is an American medical drama television <b>series</b>, based on the \nbook Twelve ... In February 2019, it was announced that the <b>series</b> had been \nrenewed for a <b>second season</b>, which premiered on September 24, ... "'This is <b>Us</b>' \nand 'The Voice' adjust up, 'New Amsterdam' adjusts down: Tuesday final ratings".",
"title": "New Amsterdam (2018 TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "This Is <b>Us</b> is an American television <b>series</b> created by Dan Fogelman for NBC. It \nfollows the ... For the <b>second season</b>, see "This Is <b>Us</b>: <b>Season</b> Two Ratings".",
"title": "List of This Is Us episodes"
},
{
"snippet": "Alexandra Hetherington Breckenridge (born May 15, 1982) is an American \nactress. She began ... She portrayed Jessie Anderson in the AMC <b>series</b> The \nWalking Dead, Sophie on the NBC <b>series</b> This Is <b>Us</b>, and Melinda "Mel" ... In \nAugust 2017, she announced that they were expecting their <b>second</b> child; their \ndaughter was ...",
"title": "Alexandra Breckenridge"
},
{
"snippet": "The fourth <b>season</b> of <b>the American</b> television <b>series</b> This Is <b>Us</b> continues to follow \nthe lives and connections of the Pearson family across several time periods.",
"title": "This Is Us (season 4)"
}
]
}
] |
Who was the last person in the uk to be executed? | 9101518012234561119 | Capital punishment in the United Kingdom | [
"1964"
] | [
"List of people who were executed",
"Capital punishment in the United Kingdom"
] | [
{
"answer": [
"Gwynne Evans and Peter Allen"
],
"qaPairs": null,
"type": "singleAnswer"
}
] | [
{
"query": "last person in the uk to be executed",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Capital punishment in the <b>United Kingdom</b> was used from ancient times until the \nsecond half of the 20th century. The <b>last</b> executions in the <b>United Kingdom</b> were \nby hanging, and took place ... The <b>last</b> known <b>execution</b> by the civilian courts of a \n<b>person</b> under 18 was that of Charles Dobel, 17, <b>hanged</b> at Maidstone together ...",
"title": "Capital punishment in the United Kingdom"
},
{
"snippet": "Ruth Ellis (9 October 1926 – 13 July 1955) was a <b>British</b> escort and nightclub \nhostess. She was the <b>last</b> woman to be <b>hanged</b> in the <b>United Kingdom</b>, after \nbeing ... As long as I was Home Secretary I was determined to ensure that <b>people</b> \ncould ...",
"title": "Ruth Ellis"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of <b>people</b> who have been <b>executed</b>. The list is categorised by the \nreason for ... 1959) <b>last person hanged</b> in <b>UK</b> for killing a policeman; Tommy \nLynn Sells (d. 2014); Laurence Shirley, 4th Earl Ferrers (d. 1760); Charles \nStarkweather ...",
"title": "List of people who were executed"
},
{
"snippet": "William Joyce ("Lord Haw-Haw") was the <b>last person</b> to be tried for treason in the \n<b>UK</b>, here seen under armed guard in 1945. Under the law of the <b>United Kingdom</b>, \nhigh treason is the crime of disloyalty to the Crown. ... to death for treachery, in \n1946. He was also the <b>last person</b> to be <b>executed</b> for a crime other than murder.",
"title": "High treason in the United Kingdom"
},
{
"snippet": "Thomas Aikenhead ( c. March 1676 – 8 January 1697) was a Scottish student \nfrom Edinburgh, who was prosecuted and <b>executed</b> at the age of 20 on a charge \nof blasphemy under the Act against Blasphemy 1661 and Act against Blasphemy \n1695. He was the <b>last person</b> on the island of Great <b>Britain to be executed</b> for ...",
"title": "Thomas Aikenhead"
},
{
"snippet": "James Pratt (1805–1835), also known as John Pratt, and John Smith (1795–\n1835) were two London men who, in November 1835, became the <b>last</b> two to be \n<b>executed</b> for sodomy in <b>England</b>. Pratt and Smith were arrested in August of that \nyear after being convicted of having sex in the room of another <b>man</b>, William \nBonill.",
"title": "James Pratt and John Smith"
},
{
"snippet": "The murder of John Alan West on 7 April 1964 was the crime which led to the <b>last</b> \ndeath sentences carried out in the <b>United Kingdom</b> ... "The tragic truth hidden \nfrom son of the <b>last man</b> to be <b>hanged</b> in <b>Britain</b>". Sunday Mirror. pp. 26–27. ^ \nBerg ...",
"title": "Murder of John Alan West"
},
{
"snippet": "Josef Jakobs (30 June 1898 – 15 August 1941) was a German spy and the <b>last</b> \n<b>person</b> to be <b>executed</b> at the Tower of London. He was captured shortly after \nparachuting into the <b>United Kingdom</b> during the ...",
"title": "Josef Jakobs"
},
{
"snippet": "To be <b>hanged</b>, drawn and quartered was a penalty in <b>England</b> and the <b>United</b> \n<b>Kingdom</b> for several crimes, but mainly for high treason. This method was \nabolished in <b>England</b> in 1870. Date <b>executed</b>, Name, Notes. 1283, Dafydd ap \nGruffydd, The <b>last</b> independent ruler of Wales, and the first prominent <b>person</b> to \nbe <b>executed</b> ...",
"title": "List of people hanged, drawn and quartered"
},
{
"snippet": "Janet Horne (died 1727) was a woman from Scotland accused of witchcraft, and \nthe <b>last person</b> to be <b>executed</b> legally for witchcraft in the <b>British</b> Isles.",
"title": "Janet Horne"
}
]
},
{
"query": "Who was the last person in the uk to be executed?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Capital punishment in the <b>United Kingdom</b> was used from ancient times until the \nsecond half of the 20th century. The <b>last</b> executions in the <b>United Kingdom</b> were \nby hanging, and took place ... The <b>last</b> known <b>execution</b> by the civilian courts of a \n<b>person</b> under 18 was that of Charles Dobel, 17, <b>hanged</b> at Maidstone together ...",
"title": "Capital punishment in the United Kingdom"
},
{
"snippet": "Ruth Ellis (9 October 1926 – 13 July 1955) was a <b>British</b> escort and nightclub \nhostess. She was the <b>last</b> woman to be <b>hanged</b> in the <b>United Kingdom</b>, after \nbeing ... <b>One</b> of these was with David Blakely, a racing driver engaged to another \nwoman ...",
"title": "Ruth Ellis"
},
{
"snippet": "This is a list of <b>people</b> who have been <b>executed</b>. The list is categorised by the \nreason for ... 1959) <b>last person hanged</b> in <b>UK</b> for killing a policeman; Tommy \nLynn Sells (d. 2014); Laurence Shirley, 4th Earl Ferrers (d. 1760); Charles \nStarkweather ...",
"title": "List of people who were executed"
},
{
"snippet": "William Joyce ("Lord Haw-Haw") was the <b>last person</b> to be tried for treason in the \n<b>UK</b>, here seen under armed guard in 1945. Under the law of the <b>United Kingdom</b>, \nhigh treason is the crime of disloyalty to the Crown. ... to death for treachery, in \n1946. He was also the <b>last person</b> to be <b>executed</b> for a crime other than murder.",
"title": "High treason in the United Kingdom"
},
{
"snippet": "Thomas Aikenhead ( c. March 1676 – 8 January 1697) was a Scottish student \nfrom Edinburgh, who was prosecuted and <b>executed</b> at the age of 20 on a charge \nof blasphemy under the Act against Blasphemy 1661 and Act against Blasphemy \n1695. He was the <b>last person</b> on the island of Great <b>Britain to be executed</b> for ...",
"title": "Thomas Aikenhead"
},
{
"snippet": "The murder of John Alan West on 7 April 1964 was the crime which led to the <b>last</b> \ndeath sentences carried out in the <b>United Kingdom</b>. West was a 53-year-old van \ndriver for a laundry when he was <b>killed</b> by ... "The tragic truth hidden from son of \nthe <b>last man</b> to be <b>hanged</b> in <b>Britain</b>". Sunday Mirror. pp. 26–27. ^ Berg, Sanchia\n ...",
"title": "Murder of John Alan West"
},
{
"snippet": "James Pratt (1805–1835), also known as John Pratt, and John Smith (1795–\n1835) were two London men who, in November 1835, became the <b>last</b> two to be \n<b>executed</b> for sodomy in <b>England</b>. Pratt and Smith were arrested in August of that \nyear after being convicted of having sex in the room of another <b>man</b>, William \nBonill.",
"title": "James Pratt and John Smith"
},
{
"snippet": "To be <b>hanged</b>, drawn and quartered was a penalty in <b>England</b> and the <b>United</b> \n<b>Kingdom</b> for several crimes, but mainly for high treason. This method was \nabolished in <b>England</b> in 1870. Date <b>executed</b>, Name, Notes. 1283, Dafydd ap \nGruffydd, The <b>last</b> independent ruler of Wales, and the first prominent <b>person</b> to \nbe <b>executed</b> ...",
"title": "List of people hanged, drawn and quartered"
},
{
"snippet": "To be <b>hanged</b>, drawn and quartered was, from 1352, a statutory penalty in \n<b>England</b> for men ... Sometimes the witness responsible for the condemned <b>man's</b> \n<b>execution</b> was also ... Staley's was the <b>last</b> head to be placed on London Bridge.",
"title": "Hanged, drawn and quartered"
},
{
"snippet": "Josef Jakobs (30 June 1898 – 15 August 1941) was a German spy and the <b>last</b> \n<b>person</b> to be <b>executed</b> at the Tower of London. He was captured shortly after \nparachuting into the <b>United Kingdom</b> during the ...",
"title": "Josef Jakobs"
}
]
}
] |
Who does wonder woman end up with in the comics? | 926954766593964346 | Wonder Woman | [
"Steve Trevor"
] | [
"Wonder Woman",
"Wonder Woman (2017 film)",
"Steve Trevor"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"General Steven Rockwell Trevor",
"Steve Trevor"
],
"question": "Who does wonder woman end up with in All Star Comics #8?"
},
{
"answer": [
"Superman and Batman"
],
"question": "Who does wonder woman end up with in the new 52?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "Who does wonder woman end up with in the comics?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "General Steven Rockwell Trevor is a fictional character appearing in American \n<b>comic</b> books published by DC <b>Comics</b>, commonly in association with the \nsuperheroine <b>Wonder Woman</b>. ... At the <b>end of</b> the storyline, the <b>Wonder Woman</b> \nand retired four-star General Steve Trevor <b>of</b> pre-Crisis Earth-Two traveled to \nMount ...",
"title": "Steve Trevor"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> is a fictional superhero appearing in American <b>comic</b> books \npublished by DC ... In the decades since her debut, <b>Wonder Woman</b> has gained \na cast <b>of</b> enemies bent on eliminating the ... At the <b>end of</b> the 1960s, under the \nguidance <b>of</b> Mike Sekowsky, <b>Wonder Woman</b> surrendered her powers in order to \nremain ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman"
},
{
"snippet": "The fictional DC <b>Comics</b>' character <b>Wonder Woman</b>, was created by William \nMoulton Marston. ... After the <b>end of</b> this storyline, Steve Trevor was resurrected \nby Aphrodite. ... like the friends they were in the past, and Diana declares her \nintention to <b>do</b> some soul-searching before returning to her role as <b>Wonder</b> \n<b>Woman</b>.",
"title": "Publication history of Wonder Woman"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b>, known for seasons 2 and 3 as The New Adventures <b>of Wonder</b> \n<b>Woman</b>, is an ... Warner Bros. and ABC <b>did</b> not give <b>up</b> on the idea, and instead \ndeveloped another TV film pilot, The New Original <b>Wonder Woman</b>, which ... (In \nthe <b>comics</b>, <b>Wonder Woman</b> would lose most <b>of</b> her strength if bound by a man.).",
"title": "Wonder Woman (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "Superman/<b>Wonder Woman</b> is an American <b>comic</b> book series published by DC \n<b>Comics</b>. The series was published from October 2013 to May 2016. Written by \nCharles Soule with artwork by Tony Daniel, it explores the relationship between \nSuperman and <b>Wonder Woman</b>, two <b>of</b> DC <b>Comics</b>' most popular characters. ... \nSoule continued, "One <b>of</b> the things that I would like to <b>do</b> is have the way ...",
"title": "Superman/Wonder Woman"
},
{
"snippet": ""<b>Ends of</b> the Earth" is the name <b>of</b> a four-issue <b>comic</b> book story arc written by \nGail Simone with art by Aaron Lopresti. Published in issues #20–23 <b>of Wonder</b> \n<b>Woman</b> vol. ... The man has come to give a quest for Diana to <b>do</b> for him: kill D'\nGrth aka the devil. Back in the present, the meeting between Nemesis and \nDiana's gorilla ...",
"title": "Ends of the Earth (DC Comics)"
},
{
"snippet": "Diana Prince is a fictional character appearing regularly in stories published by \nDC <b>Comics</b>, as the secret identity <b>of</b> the Amazonian superhero <b>Wonder Woman</b>, ...",
"title": "Diana Prince"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> is a 2017 American superhero film based on the DC <b>Comics</b> \ncharacter <b>of</b> the ... Later, the team celebrates the <b>end of</b> the war. ... Whedon \nadmitted that he <b>did</b> have an actress in mind for the part, stating that "<b>Wonder</b> \n<b>Woman</b> was ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman (2017 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "Themyscira is a fictional unitary sovereign city-state and archipelagic island \nnation appearing ... The 1987 relaunch <b>of</b> the <b>Wonder Woman</b> series establishes \nthat the ... They <b>do</b> not think in terms <b>of</b> male gender; the word "policeman" is \nalien to ... The two sects <b>of</b> Amazons forged an uneasy truce, living at opposite \n<b>ends of</b> ...",
"title": "Themyscira (DC Comics)"
},
{
"snippet": "Donna Troy is a fictional superheroine appearing in American <b>comic</b> books \npublished by DC ... She <b>makes</b> her live adaptation debut in the DC Universe \nseries Titans, played by ... A teen-aged version <b>of Wonder Woman</b> was dubbed "\nWonder Girl". ... Her role in Infinite Crisis is, at the <b>end of</b> The Return <b>of</b> Donna \nTroy, fully ...",
"title": "Donna Troy"
}
]
},
{
"query": "wonder woman",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> is a 2017 American superhero film based on the DC Comics \ncharacter of the same name, produced by DC Films in association with RatPac ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman (2017 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books \npublished by DC Comics. The character is a founding member of the Justice ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman"
},
{
"snippet": "Gal Gadot Varsano is an Israeli actress and model. At age 18, she was crowned \nMiss Israel ... Gadot portrayed <b>Wonder Woman</b> in the superhero film Batman v \nSuperman: Dawn of Justice (2016). Gadot received swordsmanship, Kung Fu, ...",
"title": "Gal Gadot"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b>, known for seasons 2 and 3 as The New Adventures of <b>Wonder</b> \n<b>Woman</b>, is an American action superhero television series based on the DC ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman (TV series)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> 1984 is an upcoming American superhero film based on the DC \nComics character <b>Wonder Woman</b>. It is the sequel to 2017's <b>Wonder Woman</b> ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman 1984"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> is a 2009 direct-to-DVD animated superhero film focusing on the \nsuperheroine of the same name. The plot of the film is loosely based on ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman (2009 film)"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> is an unaired television pilot produced by Warner Bros. \nTelevision and DC Entertainment for NBC, based on the DC Comics character of \nthe ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman (2011 TV pilot)"
},
{
"snippet": "Since her debut in All Star Comics #8 (December 1941), Diana Prince/<b>Wonder</b> \n<b>Woman</b> has appeared in a number of formats besides comic books. Genres ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman in other media"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b>: Bloodlines is a 2019 American direct-to-video animated \nsuperhero film focusing on the superheroine <b>Wonder Woman</b> and is the 13th ...",
"title": "Wonder Woman: Bloodlines"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Wonder Woman</b> is a character initially created for comic books in 1941, the \nmedium in which she is still most prominently found to this day. As befitting an \nicon of ...",
"title": "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"
}
]
}
] |
When were the first pair of jordans released? | 98262964342640738 | Air Jordan | [
"late 1984"
] | [
"Air Jordan"
] | [
{
"answer": null,
"qaPairs": [
{
"answer": [
"early 1984"
],
"question": "When were the first pair of Air Jordans released just for Michael Jordan?"
},
{
"answer": [
"November 17, 1984"
],
"question": "When were the first pair of Air Jordans released to the public?"
}
],
"type": "multipleQAs"
}
] | [
{
"query": "when were the first pair of jordans released",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Air <b>Jordan</b> is a brand of basketball shoes, athletic, casual, and style clothing \nproduced by Nike. It was created for former NBA player and 5 time NBA MVP \nMichael <b>Jordan</b>. The <b>original</b> Air <b>Jordan</b> sneakers <b>were</b> produced exclusively for \nMichael ... In 2011, the brand <b>released</b> a Black <b>History</b> Month (BHM) Air <b>Jordan</b> III\n ...",
"title": "Air Jordan"
},
{
"snippet": "Background[edit]. Michael <b>Jordan</b>, one of the NBA's most iconic basketball \nplayers, has his own shoe line called "Air <b>Jordan</b>" with one of the best selling \nbrands Nike. He has a total of 34 types of sneakers <b>released</b> from 1984-2019. ... \nFive colorways <b>were released</b> for the shoe and they <b>were the first</b> Air <b>Jordan</b> to \nfeature ...",
"title": "Air Jordan Retro XII"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael <b>Jordan</b> and Spike Lee <b>released</b> the <b>Jordan</b> Spiz'ike shoes on October 21\n, 2019, as a ... IV, V, VI, Air <b>Jordan</b> IX and XX shoes. Only 4,567 <b>pairs were</b> made \nof the <b>original release</b>, with all of the proceeds going to Morehouse College.",
"title": "Jordan Spiz'ike"
},
{
"snippet": "The "Jumpman" logo is owned by Nike to promote the Air <b>Jordan</b> brand of \nbasketball sneakers and other sportswear. It is the silhouette of former NBA \nplayer and current Charlotte Hornets owner, Michael <b>Jordan</b>. Contents. 1 <b>History</b>; \n2 Lawsuit; 3 Overseas copyright battle; 4 Athletic program ... In 1985 Michael \n<b>Jordan did</b> the Jumpman pose in a <b>pair</b> of Nike shoes.",
"title": "Jumpman (logo)"
},
{
"snippet": "Every shoe came with multiple <b>pairs</b> of shoelaces and <b>were</b> different in colour. ... \nSome shoes including the Air Presto and Air <b>Jordan</b> 1 <b>were released early</b> to ...",
"title": "Nike and Off-White: 'The Ten'"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Jordan</b> Ross Belfort is an American author, motivational speaker, and former \nstockbroker. ... He wrote his <b>first</b> book in the days following his <b>release</b> from \nprison (after a false start ... During his time running the Stratton Oakmont \nbusiness, Belfort and his <b>first</b> wife Denise Lombardo <b>were</b> divorced. ... Read · Edit \n· View <b>history</b> ...",
"title": "Jordan Belfort"
},
{
"snippet": "Nike, Inc is an American multinational corporation that is engaged in the design, \ndevelopment, ... Bill Bowerman made the <b>first pair</b> of shoes for me. ... In 2008, \nNike introduced the Air <b>Jordan</b> XX3, a high-performance basketball shoe ... \nLimited edition sneakers and prototypes with a regional <b>early release were</b> \nknown as ...",
"title": "Nike, Inc."
},
{
"snippet": "The Nike Air Yeezy is an official sneaker collaboration project between Nike and \nKanye West. Notable as the shoe brand's <b>first</b> non-athlete full collaboration, the \nproject has <b>released</b> two ... As with the <b>original</b> Nike Air Yeezy, several sample \ncolorways <b>were</b> created, the most famous of which was ... Read · Edit · View \n<b>history</b> ...",
"title": "Nike Air Yeezy"
},
{
"snippet": "Bring Me the Horizon (often abbreviated as BMTH) are an English rock band \nformed in Sheffield in 2004. The group consists of lead vocalist Oliver Sykes, \nguitarist Lee Malia, bassist Matt Kean, drummer Matt Nicholls and keyboardist \n<b>Jordan</b> Fish. ... They followed this by <b>releasing</b> their <b>first</b> EP, This Is What the \nEdge of Your ...",
"title": "Bring Me the Horizon"
},
{
"snippet": "The Air Force is a range of athletic shoes made by [[Nike ]] that began with the Air \nForce 1 and ... Also, Air Force 2s <b>were</b> re-<b>released</b> internationally in the <b>early</b> \n2000s. ... A <b>pair</b> of "white-on-white" retro low-top Air Force 1s ... Air <b>Jordan</b> · Air \nMelo Line · Air Max · Nike Considered · Nike Cortez · Nike CTR360 Maestri · Nike\n ...",
"title": "Air Force (shoe)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "When were the first pair of jordans released?",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Air <b>Jordan</b> is a brand of basketball shoes, athletic, casual, and style clothing \nproduced by Nike. It was created for former NBA player and 5 time NBA MVP \nMichael <b>Jordan</b>. The <b>original</b> Air <b>Jordan</b> sneakers <b>were</b> produced exclusively for \nMichael ... In 2011, the brand <b>released</b> a Black <b>History</b> Month (BHM) Air <b>Jordan</b> III\n ...",
"title": "Air Jordan"
},
{
"snippet": "Background[edit]. Michael <b>Jordan</b>, one of the NBA's most iconic basketball \nplayers, has his own shoe line called "Air <b>Jordan</b>" with one of the best selling \nbrands Nike. He has a total of 34 types of sneakers <b>released</b> from 1984-2019. ... \nFive colorways <b>were released</b> for the shoe and they <b>were the first</b> Air <b>Jordan</b> to \nfeature ...",
"title": "Air Jordan Retro XII"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael <b>Jordan</b> and Spike Lee <b>released</b> the <b>Jordan</b> Spiz'ike shoes on October 21\n, 2019, as a ... IV, V, VI, Air <b>Jordan</b> IX and XX shoes. Only 4,567 <b>pairs were</b> made \nof the <b>original release</b>, with all of the proceeds going to Morehouse College.",
"title": "Jordan Spiz'ike"
},
{
"snippet": "The "Jumpman" logo is owned by Nike to promote the Air <b>Jordan</b> brand of \nbasketball sneakers and other sportswear. It is the silhouette of former NBA \nplayer and current Charlotte Hornets owner, Michael <b>Jordan</b>. Contents. 1 <b>History</b>; \n2 Lawsuit; 3 Overseas copyright battle; 4 Athletic program ... In 1985 Michael \n<b>Jordan did</b> the Jumpman pose in a <b>pair</b> of Nike shoes.",
"title": "Jumpman (logo)"
},
{
"snippet": "Every shoe came with multiple <b>pairs</b> of shoelaces and <b>were</b> different in colour. ... \nSome shoes including the Air Presto and Air <b>Jordan</b> 1 <b>were released early</b> to ...",
"title": "Nike and Off-White: 'The Ten'"
},
{
"snippet": "<b>Jordan</b> Ross Belfort is an American author, motivational speaker, and former \nstockbroker. ... He wrote his <b>first</b> book in the days following his <b>release</b> from \nprison (after a false start ... During his time running the Stratton Oakmont \nbusiness, Belfort and his <b>first</b> wife Denise Lombardo <b>were</b> divorced. ... Read · Edit \n· View <b>history</b> ...",
"title": "Jordan Belfort"
},
{
"snippet": "The Nike Air Yeezy is an official sneaker collaboration project between Nike and \nKanye West. Notable as the shoe brand's <b>first</b> non-athlete full collaboration, the \nproject has <b>released</b> two ... As with the <b>original</b> Nike Air Yeezy, several sample \ncolorways <b>were</b> created, the most famous of which was ... Read · Edit · View \n<b>history</b> ...",
"title": "Nike Air Yeezy"
},
{
"snippet": "Nike, Inc is an American multinational corporation that is engaged in the design, \ndevelopment, ... Bill Bowerman made the <b>first pair</b> of shoes for me. ... In 2008, \nNike introduced the Air <b>Jordan</b> XX3, a high-performance basketball shoe ... \nLimited edition sneakers and prototypes with a regional <b>early release were</b> \nknown as ...",
"title": "Nike, Inc."
},
{
"snippet": "Bring Me the Horizon (often abbreviated as BMTH) are an English rock band \nformed in Sheffield in 2004. The group consists of lead vocalist Oliver Sykes, \nguitarist Lee Malia, bassist Matt Kean, drummer Matt Nicholls and keyboardist \n<b>Jordan</b> Fish. ... They followed this by <b>releasing</b> their <b>first</b> EP, This Is What the \nEdge of Your ...",
"title": "Bring Me the Horizon"
},
{
"snippet": "The Air Force is a range of athletic shoes made by [[Nike ]] that began with the Air \nForce 1 and ... Also, Air Force 2s <b>were</b> re-<b>released</b> internationally in the <b>early</b> \n2000s. ... A <b>pair</b> of "white-on-white" retro low-top Air Force 1s ... Air <b>Jordan</b> · Air \nMelo Line · Air Max · Nike Considered · Nike Cortez · Nike CTR360 Maestri · Nike\n ...",
"title": "Air Force (shoe)"
}
]
},
{
"query": "first pair of jordans released",
"results": [
{
"snippet": "Air Jordan is a brand of basketball shoes, athletic, casual, and style clothing \nproduced by Nike. ... Designed by Tinker Hatfield, it was the <b>first</b> Air <b>Jordan</b> \n<b>released</b> on the global market. It had four ... After the fine, Nike made him a <b>pair</b> of \nthe shoes in a black/white/concord colorway for the series against Orlando. A \nsimilar ...",
"title": "Air Jordan"
},
{
"snippet": "Michael <b>Jordan</b> and Spike Lee <b>released</b> the <b>Jordan</b> Spiz'ike shoes on October 21\n, 2019, as a ... IV, V, VI, Air <b>Jordan</b> IX and XX shoes. Only 4,567 <b>pairs</b> were made \nof the original <b>release</b>, with all of the proceeds going to Morehouse College.",
"title": "Jordan Spiz'ike"
},
{
"snippet": "Background[edit]. Michael <b>Jordan</b>, one of the NBA's most iconic basketball \nplayers, has his own shoe line called "Air <b>Jordan</b>" with one of the best selling \nbrands Nike. He has a total of 34 types of sneakers <b>released</b> from 1984-2019. ... \nFive colorways were <b>released</b> for the shoe and they were the <b>first</b> Air <b>Jordan</b> to \nfeature ...",
"title": "Air Jordan Retro XII"
},
{
"snippet": "The "Jumpman" logo is owned by Nike to promote the Air <b>Jordan</b> brand of \nbasketball sneakers ... In 1985 Michael <b>Jordan</b> did the Jumpman pose in a <b>pair</b> of \nNike shoes. ... The Air <b>Jordan</b> III, <b>released</b> in 1988, was the <b>first</b> Air <b>Jordan</b> shoe \nto feature the Jumpman logo, replacing the "Wings" logo, which had been a \nfeature of ...",
"title": "Jumpman (logo)"
},
{
"snippet": "The Reebok Pump is a line of athletic shoes that was <b>first released</b> on November \n24, 1989. ... That year, Shaquille O'Neal was given his own <b>pair</b> of pumps.",
"title": "Reebok Pump"
},
{
"snippet": ""Stepped on My J'z" is a song by American rapper Nelly. The song features \nAmerican singer Ciara and rapper Jermaine Dupri. It was recorded for Nelly's fifth \nstudio album, Brass Knuckles. The track was produced by Jermaine Dupri, and \nwas <b>released</b> as the second ... This is the second time Ciara has worked with \nJermaine Dupri, the <b>first</b> time ...",
"title": "Stepped on My J'z"
},
{
"snippet": "The Nike Air Yeezy is an official sneaker collaboration project between Nike and \nKanye West. Notable as the shoe brand's <b>first</b> non-athlete full collaboration, the \nproject has <b>released</b> two ... Mark Smith stated that Kanye wanted to use <b>Jordan</b> \ntooling on the Air Yeezy, but that Nike would not allow it, and therefore, before the\n ...",
"title": "Nike Air Yeezy"
},
{
"snippet": "The Nike MAG is a limited edition shoe created by Nike Inc. It is a replica of a \nshoe featured in the motion picture, Back to the Future Part II. The Nike Mag was \noriginally <b>released</b> for sale in 2011 and again in 2016. Both launches were of \nlimited quantities. The 2011 <b>release</b> was limited to 1,500 <b>pairs</b>, while the 2016 \n<b>release</b> was ... They are the <b>first</b> rechargeable <b>pair</b> of footwear by Nike.",
"title": "Nike Mag"
},
{
"snippet": "Nike, Inc is an American multinational corporation that is engaged in the design, \ndevelopment, ... Bill Bowerman made the <b>first pair</b> of shoes for me. ... Nike Air \nMax is a line of shoes <b>first released</b> by Nike, Inc. in 1987. ... In 2008, Nike \nintroduced the Air <b>Jordan</b> XX3, a high-performance basketball shoe designed \nwith the ...",
"title": "Nike, Inc."
},
{
"snippet": "Every shoe came with multiple <b>pairs</b> of shoelaces and were different in colour. ... \nAbloh deconstructed the Air <b>Jordan</b> 1, the <b>first</b> shoe designed personally for \nMichael ... after the <b>first</b>-ever <b>release</b> of the Nike Air Max 97 (<b>First released</b> in \n1997).",
"title": "Nike and Off-White: 'The Ten'"
}
]
}
] |