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middle400.txt
392cy0qwg1rpb51jlb6r7xvrnoai4l
race
BALTIMORE. MARYLAND--An old postcard changed the lives of an eleven-year-old boy and a very sick woman. The postcard had a picture of the steamship Titanic. The Titanic was the largest ocean ship in the world. It hit an iceberg and sank on April 14. 1912. More than 1,500 of the 2,200 people on the ship were killed. The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years. Then it appeared at a card show for people who liked to collect postcards. An eleven-year-old boy, Joey Russell, came to the show with his grandfather. His grandfather knew everything about the Titanic and its trip from England to New York. "Let's buy that postcard." he told Joey. "It will be important someday." Two years later, Joey's grandfather took him on a special trip. They went on a trip to the North Atlantic ocean to watch as workers pulled the Titanic up from the bottom of the ocean. Joey put his special postcard in his bag for the trip. On the ship, Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank. She was one of the people who were _ Joey pulled the postcard out of his pocket. "Please sign this, Mrs. Haisman." he said. She was happy to write her name on the back of the postcard. When Joey got home, he put the postcard away and forgot about it, Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick. She needed an operation, but there was a problem. The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it. Friends and relatives tried to help. But where could they get so much money? Then when Joey went to see the new movie "Titanic", he had an idea. "Millions of people are seeing this movie and reading about the Titanic." Joey thought. He remembered the old postcard with Edith Haisman's signature on it. "Maybe I can sell it for some money. Then I can help Kate's mom." Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it. Joey's story was on television and in newspapers. Joey and Kate even went to New York to be on a national TV show. After the show, many people called in to offer money for the Titanic card. Someone bought it for $60. 000. Joey's kind heart and the old Titanic postcard worked together to save a woman's life.
14
How old was the postcard when they bought it?
more than 80 years
The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years
317
390
false
7,189
middle400.txt
middle400.txt
392cy0qwg1rpb51jlb6r7xvrnoai4l
race
BALTIMORE. MARYLAND--An old postcard changed the lives of an eleven-year-old boy and a very sick woman. The postcard had a picture of the steamship Titanic. The Titanic was the largest ocean ship in the world. It hit an iceberg and sank on April 14. 1912. More than 1,500 of the 2,200 people on the ship were killed. The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years. Then it appeared at a card show for people who liked to collect postcards. An eleven-year-old boy, Joey Russell, came to the show with his grandfather. His grandfather knew everything about the Titanic and its trip from England to New York. "Let's buy that postcard." he told Joey. "It will be important someday." Two years later, Joey's grandfather took him on a special trip. They went on a trip to the North Atlantic ocean to watch as workers pulled the Titanic up from the bottom of the ocean. Joey put his special postcard in his bag for the trip. On the ship, Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank. She was one of the people who were _ Joey pulled the postcard out of his pocket. "Please sign this, Mrs. Haisman." he said. She was happy to write her name on the back of the postcard. When Joey got home, he put the postcard away and forgot about it, Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick. She needed an operation, but there was a problem. The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it. Friends and relatives tried to help. But where could they get so much money? Then when Joey went to see the new movie "Titanic", he had an idea. "Millions of people are seeing this movie and reading about the Titanic." Joey thought. He remembered the old postcard with Edith Haisman's signature on it. "Maybe I can sell it for some money. Then I can help Kate's mom." Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it. Joey's story was on television and in newspapers. Joey and Kate even went to New York to be on a national TV show. After the show, many people called in to offer money for the Titanic card. Someone bought it for $60. 000. Joey's kind heart and the old Titanic postcard worked together to save a woman's life.
15
Where was Edith when the ship sank?
on the Titanic
Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank
958
1,024
false
7,189
middle400.txt
middle400.txt
392cy0qwg1rpb51jlb6r7xvrnoai4l
race
BALTIMORE. MARYLAND--An old postcard changed the lives of an eleven-year-old boy and a very sick woman. The postcard had a picture of the steamship Titanic. The Titanic was the largest ocean ship in the world. It hit an iceberg and sank on April 14. 1912. More than 1,500 of the 2,200 people on the ship were killed. The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years. Then it appeared at a card show for people who liked to collect postcards. An eleven-year-old boy, Joey Russell, came to the show with his grandfather. His grandfather knew everything about the Titanic and its trip from England to New York. "Let's buy that postcard." he told Joey. "It will be important someday." Two years later, Joey's grandfather took him on a special trip. They went on a trip to the North Atlantic ocean to watch as workers pulled the Titanic up from the bottom of the ocean. Joey put his special postcard in his bag for the trip. On the ship, Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank. She was one of the people who were _ Joey pulled the postcard out of his pocket. "Please sign this, Mrs. Haisman." he said. She was happy to write her name on the back of the postcard. When Joey got home, he put the postcard away and forgot about it, Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick. She needed an operation, but there was a problem. The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it. Friends and relatives tried to help. But where could they get so much money? Then when Joey went to see the new movie "Titanic", he had an idea. "Millions of people are seeing this movie and reading about the Titanic." Joey thought. He remembered the old postcard with Edith Haisman's signature on it. "Maybe I can sell it for some money. Then I can help Kate's mom." Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it. Joey's story was on television and in newspapers. Joey and Kate even went to New York to be on a national TV show. After the show, many people called in to offer money for the Titanic card. Someone bought it for $60. 000. Joey's kind heart and the old Titanic postcard worked together to save a woman's life.
16
Who needed an operation?
Kate Shelley's mother
Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick
1,277
1,357
false
7,189
middle400.txt
middle400.txt
392cy0qwg1rpb51jlb6r7xvrnoai4l
race
BALTIMORE. MARYLAND--An old postcard changed the lives of an eleven-year-old boy and a very sick woman. The postcard had a picture of the steamship Titanic. The Titanic was the largest ocean ship in the world. It hit an iceberg and sank on April 14. 1912. More than 1,500 of the 2,200 people on the ship were killed. The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years. Then it appeared at a card show for people who liked to collect postcards. An eleven-year-old boy, Joey Russell, came to the show with his grandfather. His grandfather knew everything about the Titanic and its trip from England to New York. "Let's buy that postcard." he told Joey. "It will be important someday." Two years later, Joey's grandfather took him on a special trip. They went on a trip to the North Atlantic ocean to watch as workers pulled the Titanic up from the bottom of the ocean. Joey put his special postcard in his bag for the trip. On the ship, Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank. She was one of the people who were _ Joey pulled the postcard out of his pocket. "Please sign this, Mrs. Haisman." he said. She was happy to write her name on the back of the postcard. When Joey got home, he put the postcard away and forgot about it, Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick. She needed an operation, but there was a problem. The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it. Friends and relatives tried to help. But where could they get so much money? Then when Joey went to see the new movie "Titanic", he had an idea. "Millions of people are seeing this movie and reading about the Titanic." Joey thought. He remembered the old postcard with Edith Haisman's signature on it. "Maybe I can sell it for some money. Then I can help Kate's mom." Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it. Joey's story was on television and in newspapers. Joey and Kate even went to New York to be on a national TV show. After the show, many people called in to offer money for the Titanic card. Someone bought it for $60. 000. Joey's kind heart and the old Titanic postcard worked together to save a woman's life.
17
Why?
she was very sick
Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick
1,277
1,357
false
7,189
middle400.txt
middle400.txt
392cy0qwg1rpb51jlb6r7xvrnoai4l
race
BALTIMORE. MARYLAND--An old postcard changed the lives of an eleven-year-old boy and a very sick woman. The postcard had a picture of the steamship Titanic. The Titanic was the largest ocean ship in the world. It hit an iceberg and sank on April 14. 1912. More than 1,500 of the 2,200 people on the ship were killed. The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years. Then it appeared at a card show for people who liked to collect postcards. An eleven-year-old boy, Joey Russell, came to the show with his grandfather. His grandfather knew everything about the Titanic and its trip from England to New York. "Let's buy that postcard." he told Joey. "It will be important someday." Two years later, Joey's grandfather took him on a special trip. They went on a trip to the North Atlantic ocean to watch as workers pulled the Titanic up from the bottom of the ocean. Joey put his special postcard in his bag for the trip. On the ship, Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank. She was one of the people who were _ Joey pulled the postcard out of his pocket. "Please sign this, Mrs. Haisman." he said. She was happy to write her name on the back of the postcard. When Joey got home, he put the postcard away and forgot about it, Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick. She needed an operation, but there was a problem. The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it. Friends and relatives tried to help. But where could they get so much money? Then when Joey went to see the new movie "Titanic", he had an idea. "Millions of people are seeing this movie and reading about the Titanic." Joey thought. He remembered the old postcard with Edith Haisman's signature on it. "Maybe I can sell it for some money. Then I can help Kate's mom." Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it. Joey's story was on television and in newspapers. Joey and Kate even went to New York to be on a national TV show. After the show, many people called in to offer money for the Titanic card. Someone bought it for $60. 000. Joey's kind heart and the old Titanic postcard worked together to save a woman's life.
18
How much was the operation?
$80, 000
The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it
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1,487
false
7,189
middle400.txt
middle400.txt
392cy0qwg1rpb51jlb6r7xvrnoai4l
race
BALTIMORE. MARYLAND--An old postcard changed the lives of an eleven-year-old boy and a very sick woman. The postcard had a picture of the steamship Titanic. The Titanic was the largest ocean ship in the world. It hit an iceberg and sank on April 14. 1912. More than 1,500 of the 2,200 people on the ship were killed. The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years. Then it appeared at a card show for people who liked to collect postcards. An eleven-year-old boy, Joey Russell, came to the show with his grandfather. His grandfather knew everything about the Titanic and its trip from England to New York. "Let's buy that postcard." he told Joey. "It will be important someday." Two years later, Joey's grandfather took him on a special trip. They went on a trip to the North Atlantic ocean to watch as workers pulled the Titanic up from the bottom of the ocean. Joey put his special postcard in his bag for the trip. On the ship, Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank. She was one of the people who were _ Joey pulled the postcard out of his pocket. "Please sign this, Mrs. Haisman." he said. She was happy to write her name on the back of the postcard. When Joey got home, he put the postcard away and forgot about it, Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick. She needed an operation, but there was a problem. The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it. Friends and relatives tried to help. But where could they get so much money? Then when Joey went to see the new movie "Titanic", he had an idea. "Millions of people are seeing this movie and reading about the Titanic." Joey thought. He remembered the old postcard with Edith Haisman's signature on it. "Maybe I can sell it for some money. Then I can help Kate's mom." Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it. Joey's story was on television and in newspapers. Joey and Kate even went to New York to be on a national TV show. After the show, many people called in to offer money for the Titanic card. Someone bought it for $60. 000. Joey's kind heart and the old Titanic postcard worked together to save a woman's life.
19
What did Joey do with his postcard?
sold it
Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it
1,857
2,023
false
7,189
middle400.txt
middle400.txt
392cy0qwg1rpb51jlb6r7xvrnoai4l
race
BALTIMORE. MARYLAND--An old postcard changed the lives of an eleven-year-old boy and a very sick woman. The postcard had a picture of the steamship Titanic. The Titanic was the largest ocean ship in the world. It hit an iceberg and sank on April 14. 1912. More than 1,500 of the 2,200 people on the ship were killed. The postcard was passed from one person to another for more than 80 years. Then it appeared at a card show for people who liked to collect postcards. An eleven-year-old boy, Joey Russell, came to the show with his grandfather. His grandfather knew everything about the Titanic and its trip from England to New York. "Let's buy that postcard." he told Joey. "It will be important someday." Two years later, Joey's grandfather took him on a special trip. They went on a trip to the North Atlantic ocean to watch as workers pulled the Titanic up from the bottom of the ocean. Joey put his special postcard in his bag for the trip. On the ship, Joey met Edith Haisman. This woman was on the Titanic when it sank. She was one of the people who were _ Joey pulled the postcard out of his pocket. "Please sign this, Mrs. Haisman." he said. She was happy to write her name on the back of the postcard. When Joey got home, he put the postcard away and forgot about it, Then Kate Shelley, one of Joey's friends, told him that her mother was very sick. She needed an operation, but there was a problem. The operation was very expensive, and the family needed $80, 000 to pay for it. Friends and relatives tried to help. But where could they get so much money? Then when Joey went to see the new movie "Titanic", he had an idea. "Millions of people are seeing this movie and reading about the Titanic." Joey thought. He remembered the old postcard with Edith Haisman's signature on it. "Maybe I can sell it for some money. Then I can help Kate's mom." Joey told his mother and father about his idea to help Mrs. Shelley. His parents helped him try to sell the postcard to the person who would pay the most money for it. Joey's story was on television and in newspapers. Joey and Kate even went to New York to be on a national TV show. After the show, many people called in to offer money for the Titanic card. Someone bought it for $60. 000. Joey's kind heart and the old Titanic postcard worked together to save a woman's life.
20
For how much?
$60. 000
Someone bought it for $60. 000
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cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
1
What does the presidential inaugural symbolize?
Americas transition of power
symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power.
62
138
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
2
How often is this held?
four years
four years
145
156
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
3
When was Washington sworn in ?
224 Years ago
George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago.
571
624
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
4
What date was Washington sworn in?
April 20th, 1789
Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789,
836
878
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
5
What precedent did he set?
kissing the bible
He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath.
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1,043
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
6
Where was Washington sworn in?
in New York
in New York
894
906
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
7
Who broke the tradition of kissing the bible?
Franklin Pierce
Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible.
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1,171
false
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cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
8
How did he break the tradition?
He placed his left hand on
Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853.
1,114
1,219
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
9
What year was that in?
1853
in 1853.
1,209
1,219
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
10
What else was he credited for?
other traditions
Washington is also credited with creating other traditions
1,221
1,279
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
11
What else did he start?
the inaugural parade
he started the inaugural parade
1,294
1,326
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
12
The Oath of office is specified in what?
The Article
The oath of office is specified in Article II
1,453
1,498
false
7,190
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
cnn_d6e5ff9ab6e6095148a4370b53394accdb8e9513.story
3yz8upk3vtmxf09y871n9yvqa78ucz
cnn
Washington (CNN) -- At its essence, the presidential inaugural symbolizes American democracy's peaceful transition or extension of power. Every four years, the winner of the preceding November election swears to defend the Constitution. Cannons boom and bands play. It all unfolds outside in public, usually before a massive throng that thunders its approval. The simple practice and symbolism of inaugurating a president has remained consistent throughout American history -- 56 times before Sunday -- although the date, the pomp and the ceremony have changed since George Washington took the first oath 224 years ago. 13 reasons to follow the inauguration on CNN's platforms and nowhere else The first Thirteen years after the Declaration of Independence and more than a year and a half after the Constitution was ratified, Washington was sworn in on April 20, 1789, at Federal Hall in New York. The capital city later named for Washington was just a swamp at the time. He set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath. Champagne glasses and buttons galore: Obama swag at Inaugural store Franklin Pierce broke the tradition of kissing the Bible. He placed his left hand on it instead in 1853. Washington is also credited with creating other traditions. For instance, he started the inaugural parade when government officials, members of Congress, Army units, and prominent citizens escorted him to the ceremony. The oath The oath of office is specified in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. The oath for other federal officials, including the vice president, is not in the Constitution.
13
What is not in the constitution?
The oath for federal officials
. The oath for other federal officials
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1,567
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
1
Who took the silver medal?
Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez
The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez,
222
307
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
2
in which event?
men's synchronized ten meter diving
Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final
22
115
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
3
what country are they from?
Mexico
Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez
247
306
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
4
Which group did they beat?
the American team
who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position
308
404
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
5
Who are the members?
David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory
American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory
323
373
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
6
What kind of trophy did they get?
the bronze medal
the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position
319
404
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
7
Who won?
Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang
Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold
9
61
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
8
Where are they from?
China
Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang
9
48
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
9
How do they feel about it?
Very happy
We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao.
442
532
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
10
What was their score?
99.36
The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title.
117
220
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
11
What do the contribute their win to?
good coaching, diving every day and hard work
If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more."
536
638
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
12
Who is David Cameron?
the British Prime Minister
British Prime Minister David Cameron
800
836
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
13
Where did he go?
to the aquatics center
British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center
800
879
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
14
Why?
to see Daley and Waterfield in action
David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action
823
917
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
15
Who made a mistake?
Waterfield
The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield
1,439
1,503
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
16
When?
in the fourth round
a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round
1,478
1,529
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
17
Did the other diver accusing him of causing the loss?
No
The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal,
1,439
1,562
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
18
Who is the oldest on that team?
Waterfield
The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31,
1,439
1,508
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
19
According to Daley what do you win as?
as a team
you win as a team
1,579
1,596
false
7,191
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
cnn_b65acc30312304e6fd767713e350b12d2a5669a1.story
33fbrbdw6ozzh32l540id6d1c7h8cf
cnn
(CNN) -- Chinese pair Yuan Cao and Yanquan Zhang claimed gold in Monday's men's synchronized ten meter diving final. The reigning world champions scored 99.36 with a near faultless final dive to claim the Olympic title. The silver medal went to Mexican pair Ivan Garcia-Navarro and German Sanchez-Sanchez, who pushed the American team of David Boudia and Nicholas McCrory into the bronze medal position with a strong final set of dives. "We're very happy. Coming from China, of course, we hope we can win more medals," said Cao. "If we are strong at diving it comes from good coaching, diving every day and hard work. Nothing more." Tom Daley, icon of the British team, and his partner Pete Waterfield led after two rounds, but blew their chances of a medal with a poor dive in round four. British Prime Minister David Cameron made his first trip to the aquatics center to see Daley and Waterfield in action, but he couldn't spur the pair to a podium finish. Cao, 17, and Zhang, 18, had been favorites to take gold in London after a dominating display in February's world championships, also held at the Olympic aquatic center. China now have two diving golds after Wu Minxia and He Zi won the women's synchronized three meter springboard diving on Sunday. "We had the highest score we have ever got after the first three, but at this level of competition, you can't afford to miss a single dive," Daley said afterwards. The 18 year old diver refused to blame a mistake from Waterfield, 31, in the fourth round for their failure to win a medal, declaring that "you win as a team and you lose as a team."
20
And lose as?
as a team
you lose as a team
1,601
1,619
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
1
What is the horse's name?
Selim
Selim
146
151
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
2
Who's riding him?
Graham
Graham
16
22
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
3
Where?
through the redwood canyons
through the redwood canyons
39
67
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
4
What music is running through his mind?
Gypsy Trail"
Gypsy Trail"
391
403
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
5
What brushed his face?
branches
branches
1,025
1,033
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
6
From what tree?
redwood
redwood
1,037
1,044
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
7
What did he make as he rode?
a cross
a cross
702
709
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
8
What did he do with it?
he tossed it
he tossed it
744
756
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
9
Where?
on the trail
on the trail
757
769
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
10
How did the horse react?
Selim passed over without treading upon it
Selim passed over without treading upon it
796
838
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
11
Was that a bad sign?
No
A good omen
904
915
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
12
What was it?
A good omen
A good omen
904
915
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
13
What did he keep doing?
the manufacture of patterans
the manufacture of patterans
1,110
1,138
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
14
For how long?
An hour
An hour
1,178
1,187
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
15
What did the horse do then?
warned him
warned him
1,332
1,344
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
16
Of what?
the trail
the trail
1,235
1,244
true
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
17
What replied?
an answering nicker
an answering nicker
1,363
1,382
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
18
From whom?
close at hand
close at hand
1,387
1,401
true
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
19
Who was there?
Paula
Paula
1,506
1,512
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
20
What was her horse's name?
Fawn
Fawn
1,519
1,523
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
21
What did Graham do when he saw them?
put his mount into a fox trot
put his mount into a fox trot
1,443
1,472
false
7,192
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
data/gutenberg/txt/Jack London___The Little Lady of the Big House.txt/CHAPTER XXI_20d95bb75e3db3cf2f3f11c1b0f22d01827619430176605f52ea32a
3kb8r4zv1e7v0dgxa2gbuzohjgmbg6
gutenberg
CHAPTER XXI Graham, riding solitary through the redwood canyons among the hills that overlooked the ranch center, was getting acquainted with Selim, the eleven-hundred-pound, coal-black gelding which Dick had furnished him in place of the lighter Altadena. As he rode along, learning the good nature, the roguishness and the dependableness of the animal, Graham hummed the words of the "Gypsy Trail" and allowed them to lead his thoughts. Quite carelessly, foolishly, thinking of bucolic lovers carving their initials on forest trees, he broke a spray of laurel and another of redwood. He had to stand in the stirrups to pluck a long- stemmed, five-fingered fern with which to bind the sprays into a cross. When the patteran was fashioned, he tossed it on the trail before him and noted that Selim passed over without treading upon it. Glancing back, Graham watched it to the next turn of the trail. A good omen, was his thought, that it had not been trampled. More five-fingered ferns to be had for the reaching, more branches of redwood and laurel brushing his face as he rode, invited him to continue the manufacture of patterans, which he dropped as he fashioned them. An hour later, at the head of the canyon, where he knew the trail over the divide was difficult and stiff, he debated his course and turned back. Selim warned him by nickering. Came an answering nicker from close at hand. The trail was wide and easy, and Graham put his mount into a fox trot, swung a wide bend, and overtook Paula on the Fawn.
22
How was the path?
wide and easy
wide and easy
1,417
1,430
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
1
What did it replace by the end?
English vernacular architecture
replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style
1,338
1,417
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
2
What types of homes?
new middle-class homes and public buildings
new middle-class homes and public buildings
1,434
1,478
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
3
What terms described the building in the Us
Georgian
Georgian
588
596
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
4
When was this style popular?
between 1714 and 1830
between 1714 and 1830
117
139
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
5
Who ruled during this time?
George I, George II, George III, and George IV
George I, George II, George III, and George IV
217
263
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
6
Did it die with the last ruler?
No
The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture
332
432
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
7
When was it brought back?
late 19th century
late 19th century
360
378
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
8
In what country?
the United States
the United States
382
399
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
9
Did it get revived somewhere else?
Yes
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range.
0
869
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
10
Where?
Great Britain
Great Britain
466
479
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
11
Was it called the same?
No
nd in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture
434
508
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
12
What was it also known as?
Neo-Georgian architecture
Neo-Georgian architecture
482
508
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
13
What was the style restricted too?
generally buildings.
generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention",
695
768
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
14
What was some key points of the style?
symmetry and proportion
symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome,
947
1,026
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
15
Based of what?
classical architecture of Greece and Rome
classical architecture of Greece and Rome
983
1,025
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
16
Were there variables?
Yes
Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. T
1,066
1,211
false
7,193
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
Georgian_architectureGeorgian_architecture_8a2c7e6791c6bc86ff6dd9506060a9212059e8dd90d741ede253484c
3r3yrb5grf39mlc0ot5w3352aymuak
wikipedia
Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is eponymous for the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In America the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all building from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range. The style of Georgian buildings is very variable, but marked by a taste for symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically rather restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.
17
What was sometimes left off?
Ornament
Ornament
1,067
1,076
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
1
Who wanted to go to shore?
Andy and Chet
Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer.
381
570
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
2
Did they go?
Yes
Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer.
381
571
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
3
What sort of official did they meet?
unknown
unknown
-1
-1
true
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
4
Was anyone else with them?
Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer
Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer
381
569
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
5
What did Chet want to learn?
to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik
The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik.
571
676
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
6
How long before they'd be able to leave?
three or four days
"Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days."
31
214
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
7
According to whom?
Barwell Dawson
"Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days."
31
214
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
8
What product were they getting?
coal
"Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days."
31
213
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
9
How quickly were they able to start hauling it?
an hour later
And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later
320
377
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
10
What was their boat called?
Ice King
"Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_.
216
319
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
11
Was it a nice day?
Yes
"Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later.
216
378
false
7,194
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
data/gutenberg/txt/Edward Stratemeyer___First at the North Pole.txt/CHAPTER XX_84ca4a40ccccd80b07b844da3e93adf777ea542dabfdae603efee2d
34j10vatjfyw0aohj8d4a0wwku3qif
gutenberg
CHAPTER XX FAST IN THE ICE "Well, there is one piece of luck," said Barwell Dawson, the next morning. "Our collier is here, so we can take on coal at once, and get away from here inside of three or four days." "Yes, we want to take advantage of the weather while it lasts," answered the captain of the _Ice King_. And the task of transferring the coal began an hour later. Andy and Chet asked for permission to go ashore, and, after word had been sent to the governor of the place, they entered a steam launch in company with Barwell Dawson and Professor Jeffer. The explorer knew what was on Chet's mind, and aided him to find out if the _Northland_ was at Upernivik. "She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her." Chet found Tom Fetjen, a Danish-American, tall and powerful, with a shrewd but kindly face. He listened to the boy's story with interest, and then shrugged his big shoulders. "I no can tell you mooch 'bout dat whaler, _Betsey Andrews_," he said, slowly. "I not know for truf what happen to him. But I hear som't'ing las' year. Two Esquimaux men come to me an' da say dat de whaleboat he got stuck by de ice far up dare." And Tom Fetjen waved his hand northward. "Stuck in the ice?" queried Chet. "Dat is what de Esquimaux men say. Da climb up de ice mountain an' see him ship stuck fast, but go--what you say him?--float, yes, float up dat way," and again the trader pointed northward.
12
Who was inquiring about something?
Barwell Dawson
"She is here," said Barwell Dawson, after making inquiries. "I will have you taken to her."
679
771
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
1
When did the boy go missing?
June 4
he letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4.
485
559
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
2
How many weeks after did the letter come out?
More than two weeks
The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4.
484
558
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
3
Who wrote it?
His mother
The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you."
9
161
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
4
His biological mother?
Yes
The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you."
9
161
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
5
What was her name?
Desiree Young
"I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News.
164
298
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
6
How old was her son?
Seven
The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you.
8
160
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
7
Where was he from?
Oregon
The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you."
9
161
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
8
What was his name?
Kyron Horman
"I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News.
164
297
false
7,195
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
cnn_ef5596ece4a9de118290ed5d3942befc8bf95540.story
3vj40nv2qinjocrcy7k4z235g6aotn
cnn
(CNN) -- The biological mother of a missing 7-year-old Oregon boy has written an open letter to her son saying, "I am sorry that I was not there to protect you." "I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News. "I will never be able to forgive myself for being so many hours away when you needed me the most. I pray that you come back to me because I am afraid that I can't live without you." The letter comes more than two weeks after the boy disappeared on June 4. The boy's stepmother, Terri Horman, said she last saw Kyron walking down the hallway towards his classroom at Skyline Elementary School, police said. Cell phone records indicate she may not have been at the school at that time, according to a report in People Magazine. Authorities refused to comment on the report. In the emotional letter, Young speaks directly to her young son. "When you come home I will show you all of [the] things that everyone did for you, just to find you," she wrote. "There are literally hundreds of thousands of people that don't know you and yet they pray for you every night. They know how much I miss you and need you and they just want to bring you home to me. There are so many wonderful people working on this case and they are going to find you soon.
9
When was the letter released?
Monday
"I am so soooooo sorry that this has happened," Desiree Young wrote to Kyron Horman in a letter that was released Monday to NBC News.
164
297
false