Add multilingual to the language tag

#1
by lbourdois - opened
Files changed (1) hide show
  1. README.md +24 -6
README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,12 +1,11 @@
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- ----
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  language:
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  - is
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  - en
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- thumbnail:
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  tags:
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  - icelandic
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  - qa
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- license:
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  datasets:
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  - ic3
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  - igc
@@ -14,9 +13,28 @@ metrics:
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  - em
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  - f1
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  widget:
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- - text: "Hverrar trúar var Halldór Laxness ?"
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- context: "Halldór Kiljan Laxness was born in 1902 in Reykjavik , the capital of Iceland , but spent his youth in the country . From the age of seventeen on , he travelled and lived abroad , chiefly on the European continent . He was influenced by expressionism and other modern currents in Germany and France . In the mid-twenties he was converted to Catholicism ; his spiritual experiences are reflected in several books of an autobiographical nature , chiefly Undir Helgahnúk ( Under the Holy Mountain ) , 1924 . In 1927 , he published his first important novel , Vefarinn mikli frá Kasmír ( The Great Weaver from Kashmir ) . Laxness’s religious period did not last long ; during a visit to America he became attracted to socialism . Alþydubókin ( The Book of the People ) , 1929 , is evidence of a change toward a socialist outlook . In 1930 , Laxness settled in Iceland . Laxness’s main achievement consists of three novel cycles written during the thirties , dealing with the people of Iceland . Þú vínviður hreini , 1931 , and Fuglinn í fjörunni , 1932 , ( both translated as Salka Valka ) , tell the story of a poor fisher girl ; Sjálfstætt fólk ( Independent People ) , 1934 - 35 , treats the fortunes of small farmers , whereas the tetralogy Ljós heimsins ( The Light of the World ) , 1937 - 40 , has as its hero an Icelandic folk poet . Laxness’s later works are frequently historical and influenced by the saga tradition : Íslandsklukkan ( The Bell of Iceland ) , 1943 - 46 , Gerpla ( The Happy Warriors ) , 1952 , and Paradísarheimt ( Paradise Reclaimed ) , 1960 . Laxness is also the author of the topical and sharply polemical Atómstöðin ( The Atom Station ) , 1948 ."
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-
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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  ---
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  # XLMr-ENIS-QA-IsQ-EnA
 
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+ ---
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  language:
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  - is
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  - en
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+ - multilingual
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  tags:
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  - icelandic
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  - qa
 
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  datasets:
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  - ic3
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  - igc
 
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  - em
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  - f1
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  widget:
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+ - text: Hverrar tr�ar var Halld�r Laxness ?
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+ context: 'Halld�r Kiljan Laxness was born in 1902 in Reykjavik , the capital of
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+ Iceland , but spent his youth in the country . From the age of seventeen on ,
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+ he travelled and lived abroad , chiefly on the European continent . He was influenced
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+ by expressionism and other modern currents in Germany and France . In the mid-twenties
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+ he was converted to Catholicism ; his spiritual experiences are reflected in several
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+ books of an autobiographical nature , chiefly Undir Helgahn�k ( Under the Holy
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+ Mountain ) , 1924 . In 1927 , he published his first important novel , Vefarinn
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+ mikli fr� Kasm�r ( The Great Weaver from Kashmir ) . Laxness�s religious period
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+ did not last long ; during a visit to America he became attracted to socialism
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+ . Al�ydub�kin ( The Book of the People ) , 1929 , is evidence of a change toward
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+ a socialist outlook . In 1930 , Laxness settled in Iceland . Laxness�s main achievement
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+ consists of three novel cycles written during the thirties , dealing with the
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+ people of Iceland . �� v�nvi�ur hreini , 1931 , and Fuglinn � fj�runni , 1932
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+ , ( both translated as Salka Valka ) , tell the story of a poor fisher girl ;
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+ Sj�lfst�tt f�lk ( Independent People ) , 1934 - 35 , treats the fortunes of small
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+ farmers , whereas the tetralogy Lj�s heimsins ( The Light of the World ) , 1937
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+ - 40 , has as its hero an Icelandic folk poet . Laxness�s later works are frequently
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+ historical and influenced by the saga tradition : �slandsklukkan ( The Bell of
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+ Iceland ) , 1943 - 46 , Gerpla ( The Happy Warriors ) , 1952 , and Parad�sarheimt
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+ ( Paradise Reclaimed ) , 1960 . Laxness is also the author of the topical and
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+ sharply polemical At�mst��in ( The Atom Station ) , 1948 .'
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  ---
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  # XLMr-ENIS-QA-IsQ-EnA