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[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS McCord (DD-534)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS McCord (DD-534)\nUSS \"McCord\" (DD-534) was a World War II-era in the service of the United States Navy, named after Commander Frank C. McCord.\n\"McCord\" was laid down on 17 March 1942 by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, San Francisco, California and launched on 10 January 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Frank C. McCord, widow of Commander McCord. The ship was commissioned on 19 August 1943, Comdr. W. T. Kenny, in command.\nService history.\nService" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!", "McCook\" (DD-496)\n2142. USS \"McCord\" (DD-534)\n2143. USS \"McCormick\" (DD-223)\n2144. USS \"McCoy Reynolds\" (DE-440)\n2145. USS \"McCracken\" (APA-198)\n2146. USS \"McDermut\" (DD-677)\n2147. USS \"McDougal\" (DD-358)\n2148. USS \"McFarland\" (DD-237)\n2149. USS \"McGinty\" (DE-365)\n2150. USS \"McGowan\" (DD-678)\n2151. USS" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS McLanahan (DD-264)" ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS McLanahan (DD-264)\nThe first USS \"McLanahan\" (DD-264) was a in the United States Navy and transferred to the Royal Navy where she served as HMS \"Bradford\" (H72) during World War II.\nAs USS \"McLanahan\".\nNamed for Tenant McLanahan, \"McLanahan\" was laid down on 20 April 1918 by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation's Fore River Shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts and was launched on 22 September 1918; sponsored by Mrs. Charles M. Howe. The destroyer was commissioned on" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "\"McKean\" (DD-90)\n2152. USS \"McKee\" (DD-575)\n2153. USS \"McLanahan\" (DD-264)\n2154. USS \"McLanahan\" (DD-615)\n2155. USS \"McMinnville\" (PCS-1401)\n2156. USS \"McNair\" (DD-679)\n2157. USS \"Meade\" (DD-274)\n2158. USS \"Meade\" (DD-602)\n2159. USS \"Measure\" (AM-263)\n2160. USS \"Medea\" (AKA-31)\n2161. USS" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS McNair" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS McNair\nUSS \"McNair\" (DD-679) was a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer of the United States Navy, named for Rear Admiral Frederick V. McNair, Sr., (1839–1900).\n\"McNair\" was laid down 30 June 1943 by the Federal Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Kearny, N.J.; launched 14 November 1943; sponsored by Mrs. F. V. McNair, Jr., daughter-in-law of Rear Admiral McNair; and commissioned on 30 December 1943, Commander M. L. McCullough, Jr., in command." ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Free Enterprise\"\n- ex-\n- MV \"Janra\"\n- MV \"Repubblica di Genova\"\n- MSC \"Napoli\"'s separated stern section\n- Barge \"Larvik Rock\"\n- Fishing trawler \"Nieuwpoort 28\"\n- Fishing vessel \"Sandy Point\"\n- MS \"Costa Concordia\"\n- Jackup work barge \"Sep Orion\"\nExternal links.\n- FFPV \"Rocknes\" salvage\n- Pearl Harbor Raid, 7 December 1941 Salvage of USS \"Oklahoma\", 1942–44\n- Salvage" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Mertz" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Mertz\nUSS \"Mertz\" (DD-691) was a World War II-era in the service of the United States Navy, named after Rear Admiral Albert Mertz.\n\"Mertz\" was laid down by Bath Iron Works Corp., Bath, Maine on 10 May 1943 and launched on 11 September 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Selma M. Allen, daughter of Rear Admiral Mertz The ship was commissioned at Charlestown, Massachusetts on 19 November 1943, Commander William S. Estabrook, Jr., in command.\nService history." ] ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS LST-39\nUSS \"LST-39\" was a United States Navy used exclusively in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater during World War II. Like many of her class, she was not named and is properly referred to by her hull designation.\nConstruction.\n\"LST-39\" was laid down on 23 April 1943, at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania by the Dravo Corporation; launched on 29 July 1943; sponsored by Mrs. L. A. Mertz; and commissioned on 8 September 1943.\nService history.\nDuring World War II, \"" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Missouri (BB-63)" ]
[ [ "", "USS Missouri (BB-63)\nUSS \"Missouri\" (BB-63) (\"Mighty Mo\" or \"Big Mo\") is an and was the third ship of the United States Navy to be named after the U.S. state of Missouri. \"Missouri\" was the last battleship commissioned by the United States and is best remembered as the site of the surrender of the Empire of Japan which ended World War II.\n\"Missouri\" was ordered in 1940 and commissioned in June 1944. In the Pacific Theater of World War" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "), USS Missouri (BB-63) and USS Enterprise (CVN-65). \nIn the 1990s, the Hong Kong company Dragon Models released several modern US naval ships and submarines in 1:350 scale, such as the Spruance class destroyer which was released in 1990. Chinese company Trumpeter released several ships from the modern Chinese navy in the early 2000s. \nThe market for 1:350 scale ship model kits expanded further after Hasegawa released a newly tooled kit of the Japanese battleship Mikasa in 2005, which featured modern molding and greater detail. Other" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Moffett (DD-362)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Moffett (DD-362)\nUSS \"Moffett\" (DD-362) was a \"Porter\"-class destroyer in the United States Navy. She was named for William Moffett.\n\"Moffett\" was laid down 2 January 1934 by Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation's Fore River Shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts; launched 11 December 1935; sponsored by Miss Beverly Moffett, daughter of Rear Admiral Moffett; and commissioned at Boston, Massachusetts 28 August 1936, Commander Andrew H. Addoms in command.\n\"Moffett\" left Newport, Rhode Island, her base" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.", "Moffett\nMoffett may refer to:\n- Moffett, Oklahoma, a US town\n- Moffett Federal Airfield, Santa Clara County, California\n- USS \"Moffett\" (DD-362), a US Navy destroyer\n- Moffett (surname), people with the surname \"Moffett\"\nSee also.\n- Moffat (disambiguation)\n- Moffatt (disambiguation)\n- Moffitt (disambiguation)\n- Moffet (disambiguation)" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Nassau (LHA-4)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Nassau (LHA-4)\nUSS \"Nassau\" (LHA-4) is a decommissioned . When active, she was capable of transporting more than 3,000 United States Navy and United States Marine Corps personnel. Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippi, laid the ship's keel on 13 August 1973; she was commissioned on 28 July 1979. She was decommissioned on 31 March 2011.\nDescription.\n\"Nassau\" had 1,400 compartments, nine elevators and two horizontal conveyors. She also had two boilers – the largest ever manufactured" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Coalition of Hope\nThe Coalition of Hope Foundation, Inc. (COH) is a US-based 501(c)(3), not-for-profit, charitable organization that provides global humanitarian assistance and disaster-relief support. COH was founded by Timothy J. Keegan in September 2005 in Miami FL.\nThe primary goal of COH is Project Excelsior, a plan to utilize the recently decommissioned USS Nassau (LHA-4) as its primary operations platform. The vessel, referred to as a humanitarian assistance disaster relief vessel (HADR/V)" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Pasadena (SSN-752)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Pasadena (SSN-752)\nUSS \"Pasadena\" (SSN-752), a , was the third ship of the United States Navy to be named for Pasadena, California.\n\"Pasadena\" provides the Fleet Commander or Task Force Commander a multi-mission platform. This vessel has unlimited endurance due to the nuclear propulsion plant, advanced sonar, torpedo, cruise missile, and mine delivery systems, a combination of speed and stealth due to quieting and the capacity to fulfill numerous missions.\nHistory.\nThe contract to" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "SSN-778\n- USS \"Newport News\", SSN-750\n- USS \"Norfolk\", SSN-714\n- USS \"North Carolina\", SSN-777\n- Russian submarine K-407 \"Novomoskovsk\"\n- Russian submarine K-152 \"Nerpa\"\nO.\n- USS \"Ohio\", SSGN-726\n- USS \"Oklahoma City\", SSN-723\n- USS \"Olympia\", SSN-717\n- Oscar class submarine\nP.\n- USS \"Pasadena\", SSN-752\n- USS \"Pennsylvania\", SSBN-735\n- S606 \"Perle\"," ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Porter (DD-800)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Porter (DD-800)\nUSS \"Porter\" (DD-800) was a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer of the United States Navy, the fourth Navy ship named for Commodore David Porter (1780–1843), and his son Admiral David Dixon Porter (1813–1891).\n\"Porter\" was laid down by the Todd Pacific Shipyards, Inc., Seattle, Wash., 6 July 1943; launched 13 March 1944; sponsored by Miss Georgiana Porter Cusachs; and commissioned 24 June 1944; Commander R. R. Prince in command.\nHistory." ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.", "Conyngham\" for another destroyer. She was sold for scrap in August 1934.\nShips in class USS \"Porter\" (DD-59).\nUSS \"Porter\" (DD-59) was laid down by the William Cramp & Sons of Philadelphia in August 1914 and launched in August of the following year. She was the second U.S. Navy vessel named in honor of both David Porter and his son David Dixon Porter.\nAfter her April 1916 commissioning, \"Porter\" conducted her shakedown cruise in the Caribbean. After the United States" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "USS Robinson (DD-562)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Robinson (DD-562)\nUSS \"Robinson\" (DD-562), a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for Captain Isaiah Robinson (died c. 1781), who served in the Continental Navy.\nOperational history.\n\"Robinson\" was laid down on 12 August 1942 by the Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Corp., Seattle, Wash.; launched 28 August 1943, sponsored by Mrs. Howard M. Sayers; and commissioned 31 January 1944, Commander Elonzo B. Grantham, Jr.," ] ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\nExample:\nProvided: \"Pterogmus\nPterogmus rufipes is a species of beetles in the family Carabidae, the only species in the genus Pterogmus.\" Match: \"Pterogmus\"", "years in reserve at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register in January 1936, sold in June, and scrapped in August.\nShips in class USS \"Jacob Jones\" (DD-61).\nUSS \"Jacob Jones\" (DD-61) was laid down by the New York Shipbuilding of Camden, New Jersey, in August 1914 and launched in May of the following year. She was the first U.S. Navy vessel named in honor of Jacob Jones.\nAfter her February 1916 commissioning, \"Jacob" ] ]
[ "Represent", "USS Roper (DD-147)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Roper (DD-147)\nUSS \"Roper\" (DD-147) was a \"Wickes\"-class destroyer in the United States Navy, later converted to a high-speed transport and redesignated APD-20.\nShe was named for Lieutenant Commander Jesse M. Roper, commanding officer of , who died in 1901 while attempting to rescue a member of his crew. As of 2016, no other ships in the United States Navy have borne this name.\nConstruction.\n\"Roper\"'s keel was laid down on 19 March 1918 by William" ] ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!\nFor example, Escape to L.A.\n\"Escape to L.A.\" is the fourth episode of \"\", the fourth series of the British science fiction television series \"Torchwood\". It was originally broadcast in the United States on Starz on 29 July 2011, in Australia on UKTV on 30 July 2011, in Canada on Space on 30 July 2011, and in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 4 August 2011.\n\"Torchwood: Miracle Day\" follows the aftermath of a day where humanity has stopped being able to die. In should be similar to Escape to L.A.", "USS \"Prichett\" (DD-561)\n- USS \"Purdy\" (DD-734)\n- USS \"Rall\" (DE-304)\n- USS \"Ralph Talbot\" (DD-390)\n- USS \"Randolph\" (CV-15)\n- USS \"Ransom\" (AM-283)\n- USS \"Rathburne\" (DD-113)\n- USS \"Rednour\" (APD-102)\n- USS \"Reno\" (CL-96)\n- USS \"Riddle\" (DE-185)\n- USS \"Roper\" (DD-147)\n-" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS S. P. Lee (DD-310)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS S. P. Lee (DD-310)\nThe first USS \"S. P. Lee\" (DD-310) was a \"Clemson\"-class destroyer in the United States Navy following World War I. She was named for Samuel Phillips Lee.\nHistory.\n\"S. P. Lee\" was laid down on 31 December 1918 by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, San Francisco, California; launched by Mrs. Thomas J. Wyche; and commissioned on 30 October 1920, Commander G. T. Swosey, Jr., in command.\nAssigned to Reserve Destroyer Division, Pacific" ] ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title", "310 (disambiguation)\n310 may refer to:\n- 310 (number)\n- 310th (disambiguation)\n- The year 310 AD\n- The year 310 BC\n- Airbus A310, a passenger aircraft.\n- Area code 310, an area code in Los Angeles, California\n- USS Batfish (SS-310) submarine\n- British Rail Class 310 locomotive\n- Cessna 310 aircraft\n- Ferrari F310, a Formula One racing car\n- USS S. P. Lee (DD-310) battleship\n- 310" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Schenck (DD-159)" ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title!", "USS Schenck (DD-159)\nUSS \"Schenck\" (DD-159) was a in the United States Navy during World War II. She was named for Rear Admiral James F. Schenck, USN (1807–1882).\n\"Schenck\" was laid down by the New York Shipbuilding Corporation at Camden in New Jersey on 26 March 1918, launched on 23 April 1919, sponsored by Miss Mary Janet Earle and commissioned on 30 October 1919, Commander N. H. Goss in command.\nService history.\n\"Schenck\" was attached to" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "\"Scabbardfish\" (SS-397)\n2862. USS \"Scamp\" (SS-277)\n2863. USS \"Scania\" (AKA-40)\n2864. USS \"Schenck\" (DD-159)\n2865. USS \"Schley\" (DD-103)\n2866. USS \"Schroeder\" (DD-501)\n2867. USS \"Scorpion\" (SS-278)\n2868. USS \"Scoter\" (AM-381)\n2869. USS \"Scout\" (AM-296)\n2870. USS \"Scrimmage\" (AM-297)\n2871. USS" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "USS Seahorse (SS-304)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Seahorse (SS-304)\nUSS \"Seahorse\" (SS-304), a \"Balao\"-class submarine, was the first submarine and second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the seahorse, a small fish whose head and the fore part of its body suggest the head and neck of a horse.\nThe first submarine \"Seahorse\" (SS-304) was laid down on 1 August 1942 by the Mare Island Navy Yard, Vallejo, Calif.; launched on 9 January 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Chester C. Smith;" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", ")\n2881. USS \"Sea Owl\" (SS-405)\n2882. USS \"Sea Panther\" (SS-528)\n2883. USS \"Sea Poacher\" (SS-406)\n2884. USS \"Sea Robin\" (SS-407)\n2885. USS \"Seadragon\" (SS-194)\n2886. USS \"Seagull\" (AM-30)\n2887. USS \"Seagull\" (AMS-55)\n2888. USS \"Seahorse\" (SS-304)\n2889. USS \"Seal\" (SS-183)\n2890. USS \"" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)\nExamples:\n\nGiven Harvey R. Miller it matches with Harvey R. Miller\nHarvey R. Miller (March 1, 1933 – April 27, 2015) was an American lawyer. The \"New York Times\" called him \"the most prominent bankruptcy lawyer in the nation.\" Born in New York City, Miller graduated from Brooklyn College (A.B., 1954) and Columbia University (LL.B., 1959), and was admitted to the bar in New York State in 1959. \nMiller was a partner in the New York City based international law firm of Weil, Gotshal & Manges but not with 1957 - Jan 1958)\n- Lt Col Rowland H Worrell Jr. (Jan 1958 - Mar 1960)\n- Lt Col Donald W. Brookie (Mar 1960 - Nov 1961)\n- Lt Col Joseph R. Hanley (Nov 1961 - Sep 1964)\n- Lt Col Keith L. Gillespie (Sep 1964 - Jan 1967)\n- Lt Col Robert D. Glass (Jan 1989 - Jun 1990)\n- Lt Col Andrew S. Miller (Jun 1990 - Sep 1991)\n- Lt Col Ronald M. Varely (Sep 1991", "USS Tang (SS-306)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!", "USS Tang (SS-306)\nUSS \"Tang\" (SS-306) was a \"Balao\"-class submarine of World War II, the first ship of the United States Navy to bear the name Tang. She was built and launched in 1943.\nIn her short career, \"Tang\" sank 33 ships totalling 116,454 tons. Commander Richard O'Kane received the Medal of Honor for her last two engagements (23 and 24 October 1944).\n\"Tang\" was sunk during the last engagement by a circular run of her final torpedo" ] ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title", "Philippine Islands, 24 October 1944.\nUSS \"Snook\" (SS-279) missing in Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands, area (possibly sunk by a Japanese submarine), April 1945.\nUSS \"Swordfish\" (SS-193) missing south of Kyushu, Japan, 12 January 1945.\nUSS \"Tang\" (SS-306) sunk by own torpedo off Formosa, 24 October 1944.\nUSS \"Trigger\" (SS-237) sunk by Japanese aircraft and warships in Nansei Shoto, Ryukyu Islands, 28 March 1945.\nUSS" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Tinosa (SSN-606)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Tinosa (SSN-606)\nUSS \"Tinosa\" (SSN-606), a \"Permit\"-class submarine, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the tinosa, a poisonous, black, tropical fish.\nThe contract to build her was awarded to Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine on 17 December 1958 and her keel was laid down on 24 November 1959. She was launched on 9 December 1961 sponsored by Mrs. Samuel S. Stratton, the wife of Congressman Samuel S. Stratton of New York, and" ] ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title.", "USS Miami (SSN-755)\nUSS \"Miami\" (SSN-755) was a United States Navy attack submarine. She was the third vessel of the U.S. Navy to be named after Miami, Florida. \"Miami\" was the forty-fourth \"Los Angeles\"-class (688) submarine and the fifth Improved \"Los Angeles\"-class (688I) submarine to be built and commissioned. The contract to build her was awarded to the Electric Boat division of General Dynamics Corporation in Groton, Connecticut, on 28 November 1983 and her keel was laid" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Turner (DD-259)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!", "USS Turner (DD-259)\nThe first USS \"Turner\" (DD-259) was a \"Clemson\"-class destroyer in commission in the United States Navy from 1919 to 1922. She served in a non-commissioned status as the water lighter YW-56 from 1936 to 1943, and was in commission as a miscellaneous auxiliary, the second USS \"Moosehead\" (IX-98), from 1943 to 1946.\nAs \"Turner\".\nNamed for Daniel Turner, she was laid down by Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation's Fore River Shipyard in Quincy" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!", "(AM-13)\n3237. USS \"Turkey\" (AMS-56)\n3238. USS \"Turner\" (DD-259)\n3239. USS \"Turner\" (DD-648)\n3240. USS \"Tuscaloosa\" (CA-37)\n3241. USS \"Tuscana\" (AKN-3)\n3242. USS \"Tutuila\" (PR-4)\n3243. USS \"Tweedy\" (DE-532)\n3244. USS \"Twiggs\" (DD-127)\n3245. USS \"Twiggs\" (DD-591)\n3246. USS \"Twining\"" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Watts (DD-567)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Watts (DD-567)\nUSS \"Watts\" (DD-567) was a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer of the United States Navy. It was named for Captain John Watts (\"ca.\"1778–1823), who fought French privateers during the Quasi-War with France.\n\"Watts\" was laid down on 26 March 1943 at Seattle, Wash., by the Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Corp.; launched on 31 December 1943, sponsored by Mrs. Judith Bundick Gardner; and commissioned on 29 April 1944, Commander Joseph B. Maher in command" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "3335. USS \"Waters\" (DD-115)\n3336. USS \"Watts\" (DD-567)\n3337. USS \"Waukesha\" (AKA-84)\n3338. USS \"Waupaca\" (AOG-46)\n3339. USS \"Wautauga\" (AOG-22)\n3340. USS \"Waxbill\" (AMc-15)\n3341. USS \"Waxbill\" (MHC-50)\n3342. USS \"Waxwing\" (AM-389)\n3343. USS \"Wayne\" (APA-54)\n3344. USS \"Weaver\" (DE-741)" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Wiley (DD-597)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Wiley (DD-597)\nUSS \"Wiley\" (DD-597), a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer, was a ship of the United States Navy named for William Wiley, a sailor of the Navy in the 19th century who served in the First Barbary War. Wiley took part in the daring raid led by Lieutenant Stephen Decatur, Jr., into Tripoli harbor on 16 February 1804, to destroy the frigate \"Philadelphia\".\n\"Wiley\" (DD-597) was laid down on 10 August 1943 at Bremerton, Wash., by" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Stephen Decatur, Jr., in the ketch \"Intrepid\" at Tripoli harbor on 16 February 1804, destroying the frigate \"Philadelphia\" in the engagement. Quartermaster Wiley was transferred to the brig \"Scourge\" soon thereafter, and this is where his documentary trail ends.\nThe destroyer USS \"Wiley\" (DD-597), (1944–1968), was named in his honor.\nExternal links.\n- www.history.navy.mil: USS \"Wiley\"" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Wren (DD-568)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Wren (DD-568)\nUSS \"Wren\" (DD-568) was a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer of the United States Navy, named for Sergeant Solomon Wren, USMC, who took part in Lieutenant Stephen Decatur's raid into Tripoli harbor during the First Barbary War.\n\"Wren\" was laid down on 24 April 1943 at Seattle, Wash., by the Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Corp.; launched on 29 January 1944, sponsored by Mrs. Jeanne F. Dockweiler; and commissioned on 20 May 1944, Commander Edwin A. McDonald in command" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", ", 1805, and no further record of his life has been found. Solomon is known to be linked to Gabriel Wren a Marine / singer songwriter based in Nashville TN. Gabriel is a songwriter for the popular show \" Outlaw Country \" Tuesday nights on WGN America.\nNamesake.\nIn 1944, the destroyer USS \"Wren\" (DD-568) was named in his honor." ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Japanese submarine I-11" ]
[ [ "represent:", "Japanese submarine I-11\nThe Japanese submarine \"I-11\" was a Type A1 submarine built for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) during the 1940s.\nDesign and description.\nThe submarines of the A1 type were versions of the preceding J3 class with superior range, improved aircraft installation, and were fitted as squadron flagships. They displaced surfaced and submerged. The submarines were long, had a beam of and a draft of . They had a diving depth of .\nFor surface running, the boats were powered by two" ] ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes\nExamples:\n\n\"Clear History\nClear History is a 2013 American comedy film written by Larry David, Alec Berg, David Mandel and Jeff Schaffer, directed by Greg Mottola and starring Larry David, Kate Hudson, Danny McBride, Philip Baker Hall, Jon Hamm, Michael Keaton, Eva Mendes, Amy Ryan, Bill Hader and J. B. Smoove. The film premiered on August 10, 2013, on HBO.\nPlot.\nIn 2003, bearded, long-haired Nathan Flomm (Larry David) is an opinionated, obnoxious business associate\" == \"Clear History\"", "Japanese submarine I-52\nJapanese submarine \"I-52\" may refer to one of the following submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy:\n- , a \"Kaidai\"-type submarine; renamed \"I-152\" in May 1942; stricken from active duty in August 1942; used as a stationary training vessel through end of World War II; scrapped in 1948\n- , a Type C3-class cargo submarine; sunk on 24 June 1944 by a Grumman TBF Avenger flying from" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Japanese submarine I-13" ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title", "Japanese submarine I-13\nThe Japanese submarine \"I-13\" was a Type AM submarine built for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) during World War II.\nDesign and description.\nThe Type AM submarines were versions of the preceding A2 class with the command facilities replaced by an enlarged aircraft hangar were fitted for a pair of Aichi M6A1 floatplane bombers. They displaced surfaced and submerged. The submarines were long, had a beam of and a draft of . They had a diving depth of .\nFor surface running, the" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Japanese submarine I-52\nJapanese submarine \"I-52\" may refer to one of the following submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy:\n- , a \"Kaidai\"-type submarine; renamed \"I-152\" in May 1942; stricken from active duty in August 1942; used as a stationary training vessel through end of World War II; scrapped in 1948\n- , a Type C3-class cargo submarine; sunk on 24 June 1944 by a Grumman TBF Avenger flying from" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "SM UB-50" ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title\nE.g. Brokers Tip\nBrokers Tip (March 16, 1930 – July 14, 1953), by Black Toney out of the French mare Forteresse, was a Thoroughbred racehorse and the only horse in history whose sole win was in the Kentucky Derby.\nKentucky Derby.\nHis Derby win went down in history as the \"Fighting Finish\" because Brokers Tip's jockey (Don Meade) and Herb Fisher (the jockey aboard rival Head Play) literally fought one another atop their mounts down the homestretch. In an era before photo == Brokers Tip", "SM UB-50\nSM \"UB-50\" was a German Type UB III submarine or U-boat in the German Imperial Navy () during World War I. The U-boat was ordered on 20 May 1916. She was commissioned into the Pola Flotilla of the German Imperial Navy on 12 July 1917 as SM \"UB-50\".\nThe submarine conducted seven patrols and sank 38 ships during the war for a total loss of . She operated as part of the Pola Flotilla based in Cattaro. \"UB-50\" surrendered on 16 January" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it!", "Medal, 19-Sep-1981\n- Sea Service Deployment Ribbon\n- Navy Overseas Service Ribbon\n- Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal\nReclassification from DLG to CG.\nIn 1975, the \"double-ender\" \"Leahy\"-class guided missile destroyer leaders (DLG) were reclassified as guided missile cruisers (CG), as were other similar ships. The class was given an AAW upgrade during the late-1960s and early 1970s, with Terrier launchers modified to fire Terrier or Standard SM-1ER missiles. The 3\"/50 guns were replaced by Harpoon missile launcher," ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)!", "SM UB-59" ]
[ [ "Represent the next text", "SM UB-59\nSM \"UB-59\" was a German Type UB III submarine or U-boat in the German Imperial Navy () during World War I. She was commissioned into the Flanders Flotilla of the German Imperial Navy on 25 August 1917 as SM \"UB-59\".\nShe operated as part of the Flanders Flotilla based in Zeebrugge. \"UB-59\" scuttled 5 October 1918 off Zeebrugge at during the evacuation of Belgium by German forces.\nConstruction.\nShe was built by AG Weser, Bremen and following just under a" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "with a deck-mounted machine gun. \"UB-13\" was broken into sections and shipped by rail to Antwerp for reassembly. She was launched in March 1915 and commissioned as SM \"UB-13\" in April.\n\"UB-13\" spent her entire career in the Flanders Flotilla and sank 11 merchant ships, about half of them British fishing vessels. In March 1916, \"UB-13\" was responsible for sinking the Dutch ocean liner , raising the ire of the Dutch public. \"Tubantia\" was the largest neutral vessel sunk during" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "SM UB-95" ]
[ [ "", "SM UB-95\nSM \"UB-95\" was a German Type UB III submarine or U-boat in the German Imperial Navy () during World War I. She was commissioned into the German Imperial Navy on 20 June 1918 as SM \"UB-95\".\n\"UB-95\" was surrendered to Italy on 21 November 1918 and broken up in La Spezia in August 1919.\nConstruction.\nShe was built by AG Vulcan of Hamburg and following just under a year of construction, launched at Hamburg on 10 May 1918. \"UB-95" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.", "with a deck-mounted machine gun. \"UB-13\" was broken into sections and shipped by rail to Antwerp for reassembly. She was launched in March 1915 and commissioned as SM \"UB-13\" in April.\n\"UB-13\" spent her entire career in the Flanders Flotilla and sank 11 merchant ships, about half of them British fishing vessels. In March 1916, \"UB-13\" was responsible for sinking the Dutch ocean liner , raising the ire of the Dutch public. \"Tubantia\" was the largest neutral vessel sunk during" ] ]
[ "", "USS Annapolis (PF-15)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes!", "USS Annapolis (PF-15)\nUSS \"Annapolis\" (PF-15) was a United States Navy in commission from 1944 to 1946. She was the second ship of the U.S. Navy to be named for Annapolis, Maryland. She later served in the Mexican Navy as ARM \"General Vicente Guerrero\".\nConstruction and commissioning.\n\"Annapolis\" was laid down on 20 May 1943, at Lorain, Ohio, by the American Ship Building Company. She was launched on 16 October 1943, sponsored by Mrs. Belva Grace McCready" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS \"Annapolis\" (PF-15)\n311. USS \"Annoy\" (AM-84)\n312. USS \"Antares\" (AG-10)\n313. USS \"Anthony\" (DD-515)\n314. USS \"Antietam\" (CV-36)\n315. USS \"Anzio\" (CVE-57)\n316. USS \"Apex\" (AM-142)\n317. USS \"Apogon\" (SS-308)\n318. USS \"Appalachian\" (AGC-1)\n319. USS \"Appanoose\" (AK-226)\n320." ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page!", "USS Blueback (SS-326)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Blueback (SS-326)\nUSS \"Blueback\" (SS-326), a \"Balao\"-class submarine, was the first submarine of the United States Navy to be named for a type of salmon, specifically, the Blueback salmon, also known as the sockeye salmon.\nHer keel was laid down on 29 July 1943 by the Electric Boat Company of Groton, Connecticut. She was launched on 7 May 1944 sponsored by Mrs. William Brent Young, wife of Rear Admiral Young, and commissioned on 28 August 1944 with Lieutenant Commander M." ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Blueback\nBlueback may refer to any of a number of unrelated fish species with blue coloration:\n- \"Blueback\" (novel), a 1997 novel by Australian author Tim Winton\n- USS \"Blueback\" (SS-326), a US Navy submarine of the \"Balao\"-class\n- USS \"Blueback\" (SS-581), a \"Barbel\"-class submarine and the last non-nuclear submarine to join the US Naval Fleet\n- Beardslee trout or bluebacks\n- Blueback, a juvenile hooded seal\nSee also.\n-" ] ]
[ "represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph", "USS Boston (SSN-703)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Boston (SSN-703)\nUSS \"Boston\" (SSN-703), a , was the seventh ship of the United States Navy to be named for Boston, Massachusetts.\nHistory.\nThe contract to build \"Boston\" was awarded to the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics Corporation in Groton, Connecticut on 10 December 1973 and her keel was laid down on 11 August 1978. She was launched on 19 April 1980 sponsored by Mrs. Karen Dane Hidalgo (née Jernstedt), wife of the Secretary of the Navy Edward" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "SSBN-S02\n- HMS \"Artful\", S121\n- USS \"Asheville\", SSN-758\n- \"Astute\"-class (SSN)\n- HMS \"Astute\", S119\n- HMS \"Audacious\", S122\n- USS \"Augusta\", SSN-710\nB.\n- USS \"Benjamin Franklin\", SSBN-640\n- USS \"Boise\", SSN-764\n- USS \"Boston\", SSN-703\n- USS \"Bremerton\", SSN-698\n- USS \"Buffalo\", SSN-715\n- Borei class submarine\n-" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "USS Clarence K. Bronson" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Clarence K. Bronson\nUSS \"Clarence K. Bronson\" (DD-668) was a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer of the United States Navy, named for naval aviator Lieutenant (junior grade) Clarence K. Bronson (1888–1916).\n\"Clarence K. Bronson\" was launched 18 April 1943 by the Federal Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co., Kearny, N.J., sponsored by Mrs. W. P. Richardson; and commissioned 11 June 1943, Commander W. S. Veeder in command.\nWorld War II.\n\"Clarence K. Bronson\" reached Pearl Harbor 21" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "- World War II Victory Medal\n- Navy Occupation Medal with \"ASIA\" clasp\n- National Defense Service Medal\n- Korean Service Medal with one battle star\n- Philippine Presidential Unit Citation\n- Korean Presidential Unit Citation\n- Philippine Liberation Medal with two stars\n- United Nations Korea Medal\n- Korean War Service Medal\nExternal links.\n- navsource.org: USS \"Clarence K. Bronson\"\n- hazegray.org: USS \"Clarence K. Bronson\"" ] ]
[ "Represent the input", "USS Daly (DD-519)" ]
[ [ "Represent.", "USS Daly (DD-519)\nUSS \"Daly\" (DD-519), a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer, was a ship of the United States Navy named for Marine Sergeant Major Daniel Daly, (1873–1937), one of the very few people to be twice awarded the Medal of Honor.\n\"Daly\" was launched 24 October 1942 by Bethlehem Steel Co., Staten Island, N.Y., sponsored by Mrs. A. Ransweiler, niece of Sergeant Major Daly; and commissioned 10 March 1943, Commander R. G. Visser in command.\n1943" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.", "languages, group of Australian aboriginal languages\n- Disability-adjusted life year (DALY), a measure of burden of disease\n- USS \"Daly\" (DD-519), a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer\nSee also.\n- Daily (disambiguation)\n- Dailey, surname\n- Daley (disambiguation)\n- Dealey (disambiguation)\n- Daly Waters (disambiguation)\n- Douglas-Daly (disambiguation)\n- Justice Daly (disambiguation)" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Entemedor (SS-340)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Entemedor (SS-340)\nUSS \"Entemedor\" (SS-340), a \"Balao\"-class submarine, was a ship of the United States Navy named for the entemedor, a fish of the electric ray family found in shallow waters from Baja California to Panama.\n\"SS-340\", originally named Chickwick, was renamed Entemedor on 24 September 1942 and launched on 17 December 1944 by Electric Boat Co., Groton, Conn.; sponsored by Mrs. E. V. Izac; and commissioned on 6 April 1945, Lieutenant Commander W. R. Smith," ] ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title", "(AMc-78)\n1128. USS \"Engage\" (AM-93)\n1129. USS \"English\" (DD-696)\n1130. USS \"Engstrom\" (DE-50)\n1131. USS \"Enoree\" (AO-69)\n1132. USS \"Entemedor\" (SS-340)\n1133. USS \"Enterprise\" (CV-6)\n1134. USS \"Epping Forest\" (LSD-4)\n1135. USS \"Erben\" (DD-631)\n1136. USS \"Ericsson\" (DD-440)\n1137. USS \"Eridanus" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)\nFor example, 'Horse Tamers' should have a representation like 'Horse Tamers\nThe colossal pair of marble \"Horse Tamers\"—often identified as Castor and Pollux—have stood since antiquity near the site of the Baths of Constantine on the Quirinal Hill, Rome. Napoleon's agents wanted to include them among the classical booty removed from Rome after the 1797 Treaty of Tolentino, but they were too large to be buried or to be moved very far. They are fourth-century Roman copies of Greek originals. They gave to the Quirinal its medieval name \"Monte Cavallo\" (), which lingered' but very far from 'is supported by a kenning in a Norse poem that refers to \"Grani's beauteous burden,\" indicating a common understanding of the motif.\nModern influence.\nIn Wagner's Ring cycle of operas the name (as \"Grane\") is given to Brünnhilde's horse.\nIn \"Digimon Tamers\", Grani was the name of the refitted 'Ark', which was used as a steed by Gallantmon late in the series. It was directly stated in episode 47 that it was named by its creators after'.", "USS Gridley (DD-92)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Gridley (DD-92)\nThe first USS \"Gridley\" (DD-92) was a in the United States Navy during World War I. She was named in honor of Charles Vernon Gridley.\nHistory.\n\"Gridley\" was launched by the Union Iron Works of San Francisco, California on 4 July 1918, sponsored by Mrs. Francis P. Thomas, the daughter of Captain Gridley. The destroyer was commissioned on 8 March 1919, Comdr. Frank Jack Fletcher in command.\nAfter fitting out at the Mare Island Navy Yard" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "- Launched: 4 July 1918 (List)\n- Operator:\n- Commissioned: 24 January 1919 (List)\n- Decommissioned: 1 July 1922 (List)\n- Status: Sold for scrap 8 September 1936\n- Operations: World War I convoy escort\nShips in class USS \"Gridley\".\n- Designation: Destroyer No. 92, DD-92\n- Builders: (Union Iron Works in San Francisco, California)\n- Laid down: 1 April 1918\n- Launched: 4 July 1918" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph).", "USS Hawkbill (SS-366)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Hawkbill (SS-366)\nUSS \"Hawkbill\" (SS-366), a \"Balao\"-class submarine, was the first ship of the United States Navy to be named for the hawksbill, a large sea turtle (the \"-s-\" was inadvertently dropped at commissioning.).\n\"Hawkbill\" (SS-366) was launched by Manitowoc Shipbuilding Co., Manitowoc, Wisc. 9 January 1944; sponsored by Mrs. F. W. Scanland, Jr., and commissioned 17 May 1944, Lt. Comdr. F. Worth Scanland, Jr., in" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it:", ". USS \"Hawkbill\" (SS-366)\n1440. USS \"Haynsworth\" (DD-700)\n1441. USS \"Hazelwood\" (DD-531)\n1442. USS \"Healy\" (DD-672)\n1443. USS \"Heath Hen\" (AMc-6)\n1444. USS \"Hector\" (AR-7)\n1445. USS \"Hecuba\" (AKS-12)\n1446. USS \"Heed\" (AM-100)\n1447. USS \"Heermann\" (DD-532)\n1448. USS \"Helena\" (CL-50)" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Icefish (SS-367)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Icefish (SS-367)\nUSS \"Icefish\" (SS-367), a \"Balao\"-class submarine, was a ship of the United States Navy named for the icefish, any member of the family \"Salangidae\", small smeltlike fishes of China and Japan. Also known as whitebait.\n\"Icefish\" (SS-367) was launched 20 February 1944 by Manitowoc Shipbuilding Co., Manitowoc, Wisc.; sponsored by Mrs. Stanley P. Mosely, wife of Captain Mosely; and commissioned 10 June 1944, Commander Richard W. Peterson in command" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "in East Asia and the northwestern Pacific Ocean\n- USS Icefish (SS-367), a submarine\n- IceFish (band), a progressive rock project band started by Virgil Donati and Marco Sfogli.\nSee also.\n- Ice fishing" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "USS Jarvis (DD-38)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Jarvis (DD-38)\nThe first USS \"Jarvis\" (DD-38) was a modified in the United States Navy during World War I. She was named for James C. Jarvis.\n\"Jarvis\" was laid down by the New York Shipbuilding Company, Camden, New Jersey on 1 July 1911; launched on 4 April 1912; sponsored by Mrs. Jean King; and commissioned on 22 October 1912, Lieutenant Commander D. P. Mannix in command.\nPre-World War I.\nFollowing shakedown off Cuba, \"Jarvis\"" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Burrows (DD-29)\n- USS Monaghan (DD-32)\n- USS Trippe (DD-33)\n- USS Walke (DD-34)\n- USS Ammen (DD-35)\n- USS Jarvis (DD-38)\n- USS Henley (DD-39)\n- USS Jouett (DD-41)\n- USS Jenkins (DD-42)\n- USS George Washington (1908)\nSee also.\n- Oil refinery\n- Steam power during the Industrial Revolution\n- Timeline of steam power\nExternal links.\n- The General Becomes" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph:", "USS Lea (DD-118)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Lea (DD-118)\nUSS \"Lea\" (DD-118) was a in the United States Navy during World War I and World War II. She was named in honor of Edward Lea, a US Navy officer killed during the American Civil War.\n\"Lea\" was laid down on 18 September 1917 by William Cramp & Sons, Philadelphia. The ship was launched on 29 April 1918, sponsored by Mrs. Harry E. Collins. The destroyer was commissioned on 2 October 1918, Lieutenant Commander Willis Augustus Lee in command" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "October 1945 (List) and destroyed 1 January 1946\n- Operations: World War I convoy escort, World War II high speed mine-sweeper\nShips in class USS \"Lea\".\n- Designation: Destroyer No. 118, DD-118\n- Builders: (William Cramp & Sons in Philadelphia)\n- Laid down: 18 September 1918\n- Launched: 29 April 1918 (List)\n- Operator:\n- Commissioned: 2 October 1918 (List)\n- Decommissioned: 20 July 1945 (List)" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Putnam (DD-287)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Putnam (DD-287)\nUSS \"Putnam\" (DD-287) was a \"Clemson\"-class destroyer in the United States Navy following World War I. She was named for Charles Putnam.\nHistory.\n\"Putnam\" was laid down by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, Squantum, Massachusetts 30 June 1919, launched 30 September 1919, sponsored by Miss Katherine Brown; and commissioned at Boston, Massachusetts 18 December 1919, Commander Wilbur Rice Van Auken in command.\nUpon completion of shakedown out of Boston, \"Putnam\" was assigned" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.", "years in reserve at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register in January 1936, sold in June, and scrapped in August.\nShips in class USS \"Jacob Jones\" (DD-61).\nUSS \"Jacob Jones\" (DD-61) was laid down by the New York Shipbuilding of Camden, New Jersey, in August 1914 and launched in May of the following year. She was the first U.S. Navy vessel named in honor of Jacob Jones.\nAfter her February 1916 commissioning, \"Jacob" ] ]
[ "represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page", "USS Sterlet (SS-392)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Sterlet (SS-392)\nUSS \"Sterlet\" (SS-392), a \"Balao\"-class submarine, was the only ship of the United States Navy to be named for the sterlet, a small sturgeon found in the Caspian Sea and its rivers, whose meat is considered delicious and whose eggs are one of the world's great delicacies, caviar.\nHer keel was laid down on 14 July 1943 at the Portsmouth Navy Yard. She was launched on 27 October 1943 sponsored by Mrs. Charles A. Plumley, and commissioned on 4" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "3038. USS \"Steady\" (AM-118)\n3039. USS \"Steamer Bay\" (CVE-87)\n3040. USS \"Steelhead\" (SS-280)\n3041. USS \"Stembel\" (DD-644)\n3042. USS \"Stentor\" (ARL-26)\n3043. USS \"Stephen Potter\" (DD-538)\n3044. USS \"Sterett\" (DD-407)\n3045. USS \"Sterlet\" (SS-392)\n3046. USS \"Stern\" (DE-187)\n3047. USS \"Sterope\" (AK-96" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS William Jones (DD-308)" ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it\n\n\nExample:\nProvided: \"Watson's lemma\nIn mathematics, Watson's lemma, proved by G. N. Watson (1918, p. 133), has significant application within the theory on the asymptotic behavior of integrals.\nStatement of the lemma.\nLet formula_1 be fixed. Assume formula_2, where formula_3 has an infinite number of derivatives in the neighborhood of formula_4, with formula_5, and formula_6. \nSuppose, in addition, either that \nwhere formula_8 are independent of formula_9, or that\nThen, it is true that for all positive formula_11\" Match: \"Watson's lemma\"", "USS William Jones (DD-308)\nUSS \"William Jones\" (DD-308), a \"Clemson\"-class destroyer in the United States Navy, named for William Jones.\nHistory.\n\"William Jones\" was laid down on 2 October 1918, at San Francisco, California, by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation. She was launched on 9 April 1919, sponsored by Mrs. Ernest P. McRitchie, the wife of the assistant naval architect at Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, and was commissioned at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, California," ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "308 (disambiguation)\n308 or .308 may refer to:\n- The year 308 AD\n- The year 308 BC\n- The number 308\n- .308 Winchester ammunition\n- The .308 Marlin Express lever action rifle cartridge\n- The British Rail Class 308, an electric multiple unit train\n- The Peugeot 308, an automobile\n- Several cars produced by Ferrari, including the Ferrari 308 GT4 and the Ferrari 308 GTB/GTS\n- The USS William Jones (DD-308) warship\n- The 308 cubic" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page!", "HMCS Parry Sound" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "HMCS Parry Sound\nHMCS \"Parry Sound\" was a modified that served in the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War. She fought primarily in the Battle of the Atlantic as a convoy escort. She was named for Parry Sound, Ontario.\nBackground.\nFlower-class corvettes like \"Parry Sound\" serving with the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War were different from earlier and more traditional sail-driven corvettes. The \"corvette\" designation was created by the French as a class of small warships" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "HMCS Edmonton\nHMCS \"Edmonton\" is a that has served in the Canadian Forces since 1997. \"Edmonton\" is the fourth ship of its class, all of which were built for the Maritime Coastal Defence Vessel Project. The ship is the first vessel to use the designation HMCS \"Edmonton\". The ship is assigned to Maritime Forces Pacific (MARPAC) and is homeported at CFB Esquimalt.\nDesign and description.\nThe \"Kingston\" class was designed to fill the minesweeper, coastal patrol and reserve training needs" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph).", "USS Cleveland (LPD-7)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Cleveland (LPD-7)\nUSS \"Cleveland\" (LPD-7), an \"Austin\"-class amphibious transport dock, was the third ship of the United States Navy to be named for the city in Ohio. Her keel was laid down at Ingalls Shipbuilding of Pascagoula, Mississippi. She was launched on 7 May 1966, and was commissioned on 21 April 1967 at Norfolk, Virginia. At the time of decommissioning, she was the third-oldest commissioned ship in the US Navy, behind (\"Old Ironsides\") and ." ] ]
[ [ "Represent this.", "- USS \"Fairfax County\"\n- USS \"La Moure County\"\n- USS \"Barbour County\"\n- USS \"Harlan County\"\n- USS \"Barnstable County\"\n- USS \"Bristol County\"\n- \"Anchorage\"-class – LSD\n- USS \"Anchorage\"\n- USS \"Mount Vernon\"\n- USS \"Portland\"\n- USS \"Pensacola\"\n- USS \"Fort Fisher\"\n- \"Austin\"-class – LPD\n- USS \"Austin\"\n- USS \"Cleveland\"\n-" ] ]
[ "represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page", "USS Fletcher (DD-992)" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.", "USS Fletcher (DD-992)\nUSS \"Fletcher\" (DD-992), the thirtieth \"Spruance\"-class destroyer, was part of the first major class of United States Navy surface ships to be powered by gas turbines. She was commissioned in July 1980 and was deployed mainly in the western and southern Pacific, but also voyaged to the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf. She was the second ship in the U.S. Navy to bear this name but the first to be named after Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher. After her decommissioning in 2004, she" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Frank Fletcher\nFrank Fletcher may refer to:\n- Frank Friday Fletcher (1855–1928), U.S. Navy admiral, namesake of the USS \"Fletcher\" (DD-445)\n- Frank Jack Fletcher (1885–1973), U.S. Navy admiral, namesake of the USS \"Fletcher\" (DD-992)\n- Frank Fletcher (baseball) (1891–1974), Philadelphia Phillies player\n- Frank D. Fletcher, Chief Officer of the SY \"Aurora\" during the Australasian Antarctic Expedition\n- Frank Morley Fletcher (1866–1950), British painter and" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "USS Hornet (CV-8)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Hornet (CV-8)\nUSS \"Hornet\" (CV-8), the seventh ship to carry the name \"Hornet\", was a of the United States Navy. During World War II in the Pacific Theater, she launched the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo and participated in the Battle of Midway and the Buin-Faisi-Tonolai Raid. In the Solomon Islands campaign, she was involved in the capture and defense of Guadalcanal and the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands where she was irreparably damaged by enemy torpedo and dive bombers" ] ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Midway.\n- Enterprise Air Group Established 1 July 1938 to fly from USS Enterprise (CV-6), disestablished 1 Sep 1942 after USS Enterprise was damaged during the Battle of the Eastern Solomons and entered Pearl Harbor naval shipyard for repairs.\n- Wasp Air Group Established 1 Jul 1939 to fly from USS Wasp (CV-7), disestablished 15 Sep 1942 after the loss of USS Wasp during the Guadalcanal Campaign.\n- Hornet Air Group Established 20 Oct 1941 to fly from USS Hornet (CV-8), disestablished 26 Oct 1942" ] ]
[ "Represent text", "USS Rowe (DD-564)" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "USS Rowe (DD-564)\nUSS \"Rowe\" (DD-564) was a \"Fletcher\"-class destroyer of the United States Navy, named for Lieutenant John Rowe, who served with Lt. Stephen Decatur during the First Barbary War.\n\"Rowe\" was laid down 7 December 1942 by the Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Co., Seattle, Wash.; launched 30 September 1943; sponsored by Mrs. Louise Bradley Roberson; and commissioned 13 March 1944, Commander A. L. Young, Jr., in command.\nWorld War II.\nFollowing" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", ". USS \"Rooks\" (DD-804)\n2765. USS \"Roper\" (DD-147)\n2766. USS \"Roselle\" (AM-379)\n2767. USS \"Ross\" (DD-563)\n2768. USS \"Rotanin\" (AK-108)\n2769. USS \"Rowan\" (DD-405)\n2770. USS \"Rowe\" (DD-564)\n2771. USS \"Roxane\" (AKA-37)\n2772. USS \"Roy O. Hale\" (DE-336)\n2773. USS \"Royal\" (AMc-102)" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "USS Thompson (DD-305)" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "USS Thompson (DD-305)\nUSS \"Thompson\" (DD-305), a of the U.S. Navy named in honor of Secretary of the Navy Richard W. Thompson (1809–1900), never saw action against an enemy. She was the first Navy ship of that name; the second, , named for Robert M. Thompson, served during World War II and the Korean War.\nHistory.\nThe keel of the first \"Thompson\" was laid down on 25 September 1918, at San Francisco, by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "USS Thompson\nUSS \"Thompson\" may refer to:\n- USS \"Thompson\" (DD-305), named for Richard Wigginton Thompson and served in the 1920s; currently an exposed shipwreck in San Francisco Bay.\n- USS \"Thompson\" (DD-627), named for Robert Means Thompson and served during World War II and the Korean War" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Aafje Heynis" ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Aafje Heynis\nAafje Heynis (2 May 1924 – 16 December 2015) was a Dutch contralto. In 1961, she was awarded the Harriet Cohen International Music Award. A tea rose, hybridised by Buisman 1964, was named after her.\nBiography.\nAafje Heynis was born in Krommenie in 1924. At the age of four she sang in a children's choir as well as with her father at the harmonium. On the advice of Jan Mienes, the conductor of the choral society in her native town, she" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Aaltje Noordewier–Reddingius\nAaltje Noordewier–Reddingius (born Aaltje Reddingius; 1 September 1868, Deurne – 6 April 1949, Hilversum) was a noted Dutch classical soprano who had an active performance career in the concert repertoire from 1888 through the 1930s. She was also a celebrated voice teacher.\nFrom 1886–90, she studied at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam. In 1893, she married painter . She was a mentor to singers such as Aafje Heynis, Erna Spoorenberg and Laurens Bogtman.\nLegacy.\nMain-belt asteroid" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph:", "Achille De Bassini" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Achille De Bassini\nAchille De Bassini (5 May 1819 – 3 July 1881) was an Italian baritone, particularly noted for his performances in Verdi's operas. He created the roles of Francesco Foscari in \"I due Foscari\" (1844), Pasha Seid in \"Il corsaro\" (1848), Miller in \"Luisa Miller\" (1849) and Fra Melitone in \"La forza del destino' (1862).\nBassini was born and studied in Milan, and is thought to have made his début at" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes!", "Rossini\"; he composed the opening movement, the \"Requiem e Kyrie\". He died in Venice in 1871.\nCompositions.\nCompositions Sacred Works.\n- \"Messa a quattro parti e piena orchestra\"\n- \"Requiem a quattro\"\n- \"Requiem aeternam e Kyrie\" della \"Messa per Rossini\" (1871 al Teatro La Fenice di Venezia con Teresa Stolz ed Achille De Bassini)\n- \"Miserere\", a tre voci\n- many works for Cappella Marciana not published.\nCompositions Piano Music" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Ada Cherry Kearton" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Ada Cherry Kearton\nAda Cherry Kearton (born Ada Forrest; 17 July 1877 – 19 January 1966) was a South African classical soprano who sang in concert and oratorio. She made her London debut in 1907 and retired from the stage shortly before her marriage in 1922 to the English wildlife photographer Cherry Kearton. Her 1956 autobiography \"On Safari\" recounts their travels together in Africa, Australia and New Zealand.\nLife and career.\nKearton was born in Congella, a settlement near Durban in the KwaZulu-Natal province" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:", ": \"As Morley and Lawes scarcely preserved a trace of their beauties in the path of her assault, I fled before she began singing modern settings of Tennyson.\"\nShe made a last recital tour to South Africa in 1921 before retiring from the concert stage. She changed her name from Ada Forrest to Ada Cherry Kearton in 1922, upon marrying the wildlife photographer Cherry Kearton (his second marriage) and then \"devoted her life to her husband and his work\". The couple had a pet chimpanzee named Mary who" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Adalbert Kraus" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Adalbert Kraus\nAdalbert Kraus (born 27 April 1937 in Aschaffenburg) is a German tenor in opera and concert, known for singing the works of Johann Sebastian Bach.\nCareer.\nAdalbert Kraus first graduated in German studies, theology, and philosophy and in 1967, began to study voice at the Hochschule für Musik Würzburg with Henriette Klink-Schneider.\nHe was a lyric tenor at the Staatsoper Hannover from 1970 to 1974. His roles included Andres in Berg's \"Wozzeck\", Toni in Henze's \"Elegy" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "'s \"Lukas-Passion\" with Uta Spreckelsen, Theo Altmeyer, Adalbert Kraus, Gerd Beusker, conducted by . In 1979, he recorded Schuberts masses No 1, No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, No. 4 and No. 5 with the Spandauer Kantorei, conducted by Martin Behrmann.\nFaulstich wrote a book on teaching voice, \"\" (1997, )" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Adelaide Bishop" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Adelaide Bishop\nAdelaide Bishop (23 June 1928 – 20 June 2008) was an American operatic soprano, musical theatre actress, opera director, stage director, and voice teacher. She began her career appearing in Broadway musicals as a teenager during the early 1940s. She became a principal soprano with the New York City Opera (NYCO) in 1948, where she performed through 1960 in a broad repertoire encompassing German, French, Italian, and English operas from a variety of musical periods. In the late 1950s, she started" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "characters than most writers produce in a career.\"Card, Orson Scott. \"Books to Look For.\" \"Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction\", Sep. 1988: 33. John Clute's assessment emphasizes another theme of the work: \"Michael Bishop, whose voice is like a shout from the bottom of the well of the enormous South, and whose heart is on his sleeve, [manages] in \"Unicorn Mountain\" to generate a moving tale out of ecological disaster here and in another world, AIDS," ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Adele Leigh" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Adele Leigh\nAdele Leigh (15 June 1928 – 23 May 2004) was an English operatic soprano, later the wife of the Austrian ambassador in London.\nEarly life.\nAdele Leigh was born in London on 15 June 1928. Her father left when she was two and she was brought up in Highbury by her mother, Betty, and her Polish-Jewish immigrant grandparents. At the start of the World War II, the family moved to Reading, where they all shared one rented room in a large house" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "a big break. He has to decide whether to remain with his family's music hall act or to go solo. \nAn audition scene at Covent Garden includes an especially fine rendition of Puccini's \"Nessun Dorma\" by Secombe, who, while known mainly as a comedian, had a fine tenor voice, and Mozart's \"Voi Che Sapete\" performed by Adele Leigh.\nMain cast.\n- Harry Secombe as Davy Morgan\n- Alexander Knox as Sir Giles Manning\n- Ron Randell as George\n-" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Adolf Dallapozza" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Adolf Dallapozza\nAdolf Dallapozza (born 14 March 1940 in Bolzano) is an Austrian tenor in opera, operetta and musical theatre He worked for more than 40 years at the Vienna Volksoper.\nCareer.\nDallapozza was trained as a clerk and started work in a book shop. At the same time, he studied singing - among his teachers was the Italian-born soprano Ida Valjalo - and sang in the chorus of the Vienna Volksoper.\nAt the Volksoper, he sang in his solo debut in 1962 the role" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Popov, Valeri Alexejev, Dagmar Schellenberger, Jiri Kalendovsky, Damir Basyrov, Valentin Prolat, Carmine Monaco, Alexandr Blagodarnyi, Bruno Pestarino\n- 2015, Jiří Bělohlávek (conductor), BBC Singers, BBC Symphony Orchestra; Dana Burašová, Alžběta Poláčková, Richard Samek, Aleš Voráček, Ivan Kusnjer, Svatopluk Sem, Jan Stava\nIn German\n- 1969, Josef Krips (conductor), Orchestra and chorus Vienna State Opera; Eberhard Wächter, Ludovico Spiess, Oskar Czerwenka, Walter Kreppel, Adolf Dallapozza, Tugomir Franc," ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Adriana Ferrarese del Bene" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Adriana Ferrarese del Bene\nAdriana Ferrarese del Bene (born c. 1755 in Ferrara - died after 1804 in Venice) was an Italian operatic soprano. She was one of the first performers of Susanna in Mozart's \"Le Nozze di Figaro\" and the first performer of Fiordiligi in \"Così fan tutte\".\nShe has been known under a variety of names. The 1979 edition of the \"Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera\" lists her as born Adriana Gabrieli and later known La Ferrarese (presumably from the city of her" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "birth). However, \"Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians\" notes that her identification with a Francesca Gabrielli, \"\"detta la Ferrarese\"\" (\"called la Ferrarese\"), whom Charles Burney heard in Venice in 1770 is not based on solid evidence. What is known is that she married Luigi del Bene in 1782 and performed thereafter as Adriana Ferrarese (or Ferraresi) del Bene.\nAdriana Ferrarese del Bene studied in Venice and performed in London before arriving in Vienna, where she made her reputation singing" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Adriana Guerrini" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Adriana Guerrini\nAdriana Guerrini (September 22, 1907 – April 24, 1970) was an Italian operatic soprano, particularly associated with the Italian repertory.\nGuerrini initially studied with Elvira Cesaroli Salvatori but being dissatisfied, applied to Beniamino Gigli for advice and was directed to Roberto Giovannini, active at the Conservatorio di Santa Cecilia (Rome) but also at the famous \"Scuola di arpe,\" directed by Isabella Rosati Caserini. After three years with Giovannini, she made her first operatic appearance in June 1935 at the Teatro Quattro" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Rossini's Bartolo in \"Il barbiere di Siviglia\" under Alberto Erede, Erich Leinsdorf, and Silvio Varviso, Dulcamara in \"L'elisir d'amore\", \"Don Pasquale\", Fra Melitone in \"La forza del destino\", with Renata Tebaldi and Mario del Monaco, and a second with Adriana Guerrini, \"Gianni Schicchi\", Benoit/Alcindoro in La bohème at least three times, etc. He also recorded the role of Rodolfo in \"La sonnambula\", opposite Joan Sutherland in 1962. More serious roles he recorded" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Aglaja Orgeni" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.", "Aglaja Orgeni\nAglaja Orgeni, real name Anna Maria von Görger St. Jörgen (17 December 1841 – 15 March 1926), was a Hungarian operatic coloratura soprano.\nBiography.\nOrgeni was born in Rimászombat, Galicia (now Rimavská Sobota, Slovakia). She studied with Pauline Viardot in Baden-Baden and Mathilde Marchesi.\nShe became a member of the Hofoper Berlin (1865–1866), making her debut as Amina in Bellini's \"La sonnambula\". In 1866, she performed at Covent Garden singing Violetta in" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.", "Aglaja\nAglaja may refer to:\n- An alternative form of Aglaia (given name)\n- Aglaja Orgeni (1841–1926), Hungarian opera singer\n- Aglaja Brix (born 1990), German actress\n- Aglaya, a character in Dostoyevski's novel The Idiot\n- Aglaja (dance company), from Bruges, Belgium\n- \"Aglaja\" (gastropod), a genus of sea slugs\n- 47 Aglaja, a large main belt asteroid" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Aino Ackté" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title!", "Aino Ackté\nAino Ackté (originally Achte; 23 April 18768 August 1944) was a Finnish soprano. She was the first international star of the Finnish opera scene after Alma Fohström, and a groundbreaker for the domestic field.\nBiography.\nAckté was born in Helsinki. Her parents were mezzo-soprano Emmy Achté (née Strömer) and the conductor-composer Lorenz Nikolai Achté. Aino Ackté married a doctor, Heikki Renvall, in 1901 and gave birth to a daughter, Glory Leppänen, the same year. Their" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "summerhouse, Villa Aino Ackté, located in Helsinki is being rented by the city for cultural activities and meetings.\nAckté is most likely the original model for the opera diva character Bianca Castafiore in comics books of \"Adventures of Tintin\" by Belgian Hergé.\nReferences.\n- Severi Nygård: Tintti Suomessa (Tintin in Finland), Helsingin Sanomat, Kuukausiliite, October 2008.\nExternal links.\n- Voice sample from YLE Areena\n- Villa Aino Ackté" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Alaine Rodin" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Alaine Rodin\nAlaine Rodin is an American operatic soprano who has sung leading roles both in the United States and internationally.\nBiography.\nA native of Berkeley California, she studied at the San Francisco Conservatory and the Juilliard School and trained with the Lyric Opera of Chicago's Young Artists programme, appearing in the LOC company premiere of Corigliano's \"The Ghosts of Versailles\" in 1990. She went on to sing Woglinde in \"Das Rheingold\" (New Orleans Opera), Antonia in \"Les contes d'Hoffmann\" (" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this", "Music.\nHer appearances on the concert stage have included those at Sarasota Opera and the Kyoto International Music Festival.\nRecordings.\n- William Schuman: \"The Mighty Casey – A Baseball Opera In Three Scenes\" and \"A Question of Taste\" ; Juilliard Orchestra; 1994. Label: Delos Records\nExternal links.\n- Alaine Rodin on Thea Dispeker Inc. Artists Management" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Alasdair Elliott" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Alasdair Elliott\nAlasdair Elliott is a British operatic tenor. With The Royal Opera, Elliott sang the role of Emperor Altoum in Puccini's \"Turandot\" in 2014." ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "led by Goulding, and echoed by Elliott. Always interviewed by Elliott.\n- Cyril Gore, a Boris Karloff sound-alike who often appeared as a butler or doorman; his catchphrase was \"Follow me down this cor-ree-dor.\"\n- Peter Gorey, a character similar to Gore but with a Peter Lorre-type voice. He would typically appear as a news reporter, reading the same gruesome stories (\"Three men were run over by a steamroller today...\") each time he appeared" ] ]
[ "Represent text", "Albertine Morin-Labrecque" ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Albertine Morin-Labrecque\nAlbertine Morin-Labrecque (sometimes Labrecque-Morin) (8 June 1886 – 22 or 25 September 1957) was a Canadian pianist, soprano, composer, and music educator. Her compositional output includes 4 ballets, 2 comic operas, the Chinese Opera \"Pas-chu\", 2 concertos for two pianos, the symphonic poem \"Le Matin\", numerous symphonic works, and compositions for band. Her works have been published by a variety of companies. A square and a street in Montreal" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "(1917–2007)\n- François Morel (born 1926)\n- Éric Morin (born 1969)\n- Léo-Pol Morin (1892–1941)\n- Albertine Morin-Labrecque (1886 or 1890–1957)\n- Jocelyn Morlock (born 1969)\n- Marjan Mozetich (born 1948)\nN.\n- Phil Nimmons (born 1923)\n- Robert Normandeau (born 1955)\nO.\n- Oscar O'Brien (1892–1958)\n- Michael Oesterle (born 1968)\n- John Oliver (born 1959)\n-" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)!", "Alda Noni" ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Alda Noni\nAlda Noni (April 30, 1916 – May 19, 2011) was an Italian soprano leggiero, one of the leading soubrettes of the immediate postwar period.\nBorn in Trieste, she first studied voice and piano in her native city, and completed her studies in Vienna. She made her professional debut in Ljubljana in 1937, as Rosina, later appearing in Zagreb and Belgrade.\nShe sang at the Vienna State Opera from 1942 to 1946, in Mozart, Rossini and lighter Donizetti roles, such as" ] ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title\nFor example, Slavcho Boychev\nSlavcho Boychev (; born 2 May 1983) is a Bulgarian footballer, currently playing for FC Kyustendil as a defender.\nBoychev previously played for Marek Dupnitsa and Montana in the A PFG. should be similar to Slavcho Boychev", "He can be heard on \"live recordings\" in the two aforementioned historical performances of \"La sonnambula\" and \"La traviata\" with Maria Callas. Valletti can also be heard in a \"lighter\" cast version of \"Madama Butterfly\" which paired him with Anna Moffo.\nSelected studio recordings.\n- Cimarosa - \"Il matrimonio segreto\" - Alda Noni, Ornella Rovero, Giulietta Simionato, Sesto Bruscantini, Antonio Cassinelli - Orchestra of the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Manno Wolf-Ferrari (1950, Florence)" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Aled Wyn Davies" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Aled Wyn Davies\nAled Wyn Davies (born 3 August 1974) is a classical tenor from Llanbrynmair, in Powys, Mid Wales. He is a member of the Three Welsh Tenors with Rhys Meirion and Aled Hall.\nCareer.\nDavies is an award winning tenor soloist who has performed in venues all over the world. He was awarded the prestigious \"David Ellis Memorial Prize\" - The Blue Riband awarded to the best classical soloist at the National Eisteddfod of Wales in Swansea in 2006 following a hat-trick of" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Aled\nAled () is a male Welsh given name and may refer to:\n- Aled Brew, Welsh rugby union player\n- Aled Edwards, Canadian structural biologist\n- Aled Haydn Jones (born 1976), Welsh radio producer\n- Aled James, rugby league player\n- Aled Jones (born 1970), Welsh singer and broadcaster\n- Aled Owen Roberts (1889–1949), Welsh politician, soldier and businessman\n- Aled Thomas, Welsh rugby union player\n- Aled Wyn Davies (born 1974)" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Alessandra Marianelli" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Alessandra Marianelli\nAlessandra Marianelli (born 1986) is an Italian soprano. She made her professional debut in 2002 as Barbarina in \"Le nozze di Figaro\" and went on to sing leading roles in the opera houses of her native country and internationally. Her recordings include Amour in \"Orphée et Eurydice\" for Decca Records and Fiorilla in \"Il turco in Italia\" for Naxos Records. She also appeared in Carlos Saura's 2009 film \"Io, Don Giovanni\".\nLife and career.\nMarianelli was born in" ] ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "ballo in maschera\" at the Opéra de Monte-Carlo (2011); and Giulietta in \"Un giorno di regno\" at the Teatro Regio di Parma (2013).\nExternal links.\n- Artist's page on Stage Door Artists' Management\n- Alessandra Marianelli on Operabase\n- Video: Alessandra Marianelli as Juliette and José Bros as Roméo in Gounod's \"Roméo et Juliette\", streamed from the Teatro Carlo Felice (2012)." ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Alessandro Corbelli" ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Alessandro Corbelli\nAlessandro Corbelli (born September 21, 1952) is an Italian baritone opera singer. One of the world's pre-eminent singers specializing in Mozart and Rossini, Corbelli has sung in many major opera houses around the world and won admiration for his elegant singing style and sharp characterizations, especially in comic roles.\nCareer and roles.\nCorbelli was born in Turin, Italy in 1952 and studied with Giuseppe Valdengo and Claude Thiolas. He made his debut in 1973 (at the age of twenty-one" ] ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Strauss II\n- \"Die Fledermaus\" (Gabriel von Eisenstein)\n- Igor Stravinsky\n- \"The Rake's Progress\" (Nick Shadow)\n- Tommaso Traetta\n- \"Le serve rivali\" (Don Grillo)\n- Giuseppe Verdi\n- \"Falstaff\" (Ford, Sir John Falstaff)\nReferences.\n- \"Great Opera Singers: Alessandro Corbelli\", https://web.archive.org/web/20091026192837/http://www.ateraz.com/opera/corbelli/ (accessed 22 December 2009).\n- \"Interview Alessandro Corbelli\" at Forum Opera, www.forumopera.com/v1/actu/corbelli.html (accessed 29 December 2009)" ] ]
[ "represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph", "Alessio De Paolis" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Alessio De Paolis\nAlessio De Paolis (9 March 1893 – 5 March 1964) was an Italian operatic tenor who specialized in character roles. He was a prominent member of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City where he sang from 1938 to 1964. At the Met De Paolis performed 51 different roles, primarily in the Italian and French repertoires, in a remarkable 1555 performances. In 1931, De Paolis created the role of Monsieur Le Beau in Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari's opera \"La vedova scaltra\" and that of Christian" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the input", "Athletics Club, the oldest Italian soccer club, is formed by British expatriates. In its earliest years, it principally competed in athletics and cricket. Association football was secondarily practised.\nBirths.\n- January 11 – Tancredi Pasero, Italian bass singer (died 1983)\n- January 26 – Giuseppe Genco Russo, Italian Mafia boss from Mussomeli (Sicily) (died 1976)\n- February 12 – Giovanni Muzio, Italian architect closely associated with Novecento Italiano (died 1982)\n- March 9 – Alessio De Paolis" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Alexander Girardi" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Alexander Girardi\nAlexander Girardi (pronounced ) (5 December 1850 – 20 April 1918) was an Austrian actor and tenor singer in operettas.\nCareer.\nGirardi was born in Graz; his father was the locksmith Andreas Girardi who had migrated to Graz from Cortina d'Ampezzo. Following the early death of his father, Alexander Girardi was raised by his stepfather who put him into a locksmith apprenticeship. Against his stepfather's wishes, he joined the amateur theatre \"Die Tonhalle\", where his acting talent was discovered; this" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.", "Text by Rudolf Baumbach.\n- \"Skating polka\" , op. 28. For voice and piano. Dedicated to Mr. Alexander Girardi .\n- \"Memory of March 14, 1848 . The University\" . Song for voice and piano.\n- \"The first quadrille\" , op. 9. For piano four hands.\n- \"It was an old king.\" Song for voice and piano. Text: Heinrich Heine.\n- \"Eskimojade\" for male quartet and piano.\n- \"Driving" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Alexander Tsymbalyuk" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Alexander Tsymbalyuk\nAlexander Tsymbalyuk is a Ukrainian bass opera singer, a member of the Hamburg State Opera. He made his debut with The Royal Opera for the 2013/14 season, singing the Commendatore in Don Giovanni.\nRepertoire.\n- Don Giovanni, Commendatore\nExternal links.\n- Alexander Tsymbalyuk's management page Askonas Holt" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Opera Live in HD performance alongside Nina Stemme in the title role, Marco Berti as Calaf and Alexander Tsymbalyuk as Timur.\nOn 4 December 2018, Hartig was Maria Boccanegra (Amelia Grimaldi) for the Opera National de Paris (Bastille) in Simon Boccanegra (Giuseppe Verdi).\nIn the Metropolitan Opera's Spring 2019 production of La traviata, she once again played Violetta." ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Alexandra Deshorties" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Alexandra Deshorties\nAlexandra Deshorties (born 1975) is a French-Canadian soprano who sings principally opera. She was born in Canada and raised in Marseille, France, where she attended the Conservatory and \"where she earned a gold medal/first prize for her performance in vocal juries.\" She continued her education at the Manhattan School of Music.\nA winner of the Metropolitan Opera Council Auditions (and a participant in the National Council Winners Concert on 2 March 1997) at 21, she entered the Metropolitan Opera's" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", ")\n- Angela Brown (1997)\n- Alexandra Deshorties (1997)\n- Karen Henrikson (1997)\n- Sandra Yvonne Lopez (1997)\n- Mary Petro (1997)\n- Susan Tilbury (1997)\n- Andrea Trebnik (1997)\n- Mark Uhlemann (1997)\n- Jennifer Welch (1997)\n- Eric Cutler (1998)\n- Philip Horst (1998)\n- Kyle Ketelsen (1998)\n- Mariateresa Magisano (1998)\n- Keith Phares (1998)" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Alexandra Čvanová" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:", "Alexandra Čvanová\nAlexandra Čvanová (25 April 1897 - 20 May 1939) was an operatic soprano, the creator of roles in operas by Leoš Janáček and Pavel Haas.\nShe was born in Odessa, where she studied music and drama, and sang in the opera house there. In 1923, she moved to Czechoslovakia and in 1926 became a soloist at the National Theatre in Brno, initially under the surname Remislawská. Her roles there included Jaroslavna in \"Prince Igor\", Tatiana in \"Eugene Onegin\" and Lisa in" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "19 Apr 1857 – 16 Sep 1916)\n- Amy Olivia Paget (3 Jun 1858 – 14 Feb 1948)\n- Alberta Victoria Paget (1859 – 28 Jul 1945)\n- Almeric Hugh Paget, 1st Baron Queenborough (14 Mar 1861 – 22 Sep 1949)\n- Alice Maud Paget (9 Jul 1862 – 24 Dec 1925)\n- Alexandra Harriet Paget (31 Mar 1863 – 1944), married Edward Colebrooke, 1st Baron Colebrooke.\n- Guinevere Eva Paget (16 Mar 1869 – 26 Feb 1894" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Alexandrina Pendatchanska" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Alexandrina Pendatchanska\nAlexandrina Pendatchanska (sometimes written as Alexandrina Pendachanska) () (born 24 September 1970) is a Bulgarian operatic soprano. Increasingly, she is known professionally as Alex Penda.\nCareer.\nPendatchanska was born in Sofia, Bulgaria into a family of renowned Bulgarian musicians. Her grandfather Sasha Popov was a violinist and conductor and the founder of the Sofia Philharmonic Orchestra. Her mother Valerie Popova was an internationally acclaimed soprano who sung regularly at La Scala in Milan from 1983 to 1986. She studied piano from early" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "(Cléomer), Ryland Davies, Royal Opera Covent Garden Chorus and Orchestra, cond. Richard Bonynge, November 28, 1983), live in-house recording. Available as the web stream at Opera Today archives (TT: 142'55\")\n- Alexandrina Pendatchanska (Esclarmonde), Claudia Nicole Bandera (Parséis), Alberto Cupido (Roland), Michele Pertusi (Phorcas), Manrico Biscotti (The Bishop of Blois), Teatro Regio di Torino, cond. Alain Guingal (November/December 1992), Charles" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Alfred Orda" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Alfred Orda\nAlfred Orda (full name Alfred Orda-Wdowczak; 1915–2004) was a Polish operatic baritone and soloist who lived in the UK for most of his life. A regular performer at the BBC Proms, especially from 1943 to 1964, Orda was born in Łódź, Poland. \"There was always singing in his life, for his mother had a good contralto voice.\"\nEarly singing career.\n\"While still at technical high school his vocal potential was recognised and at 19 he had his first singing" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "\"Orda proved himself a possessor of a voice of international celebrity standard\". After his second concert the following year, the \"Glasgow Times\" reviewer wrote (on 5 January 1942) that \"there are few living singers with a voice of such quality\". While in Glasgow, Orda met his future wife.\nEarly credits.\nIn 1942, Orda made his first British operatic appearance as Valentin in 'Faust' with the Carl Rosa Company and in 1943 he was engaged by Sir Henry Wood for the Promenade" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)!", "Alfred Piccaver" ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes\n\nFor instance, <<FNAB-43\nThe FNAB-43 is an Italian designed and developed submachine gun manufactured from 1943 to 1944. The first prototype was built in 1942 and the 7,000 built by the FNA-B (\"Fabbrica Nazionale d'Armi di Brescia\", \"Brescia National Arms Factory\", hence the name) were issued to German and Italian RSI (Repubblica Sociale Italiana) units fighting in Northern Italy. The FNAB-43 was an expensive weapon to manufacture as it used extensive milling and precision engineering in its manufacture.\nDescription.\nThe FNAB-43 uses a>> to <<FNAB-43>>", "Alfred Piccaver\nAlfred Piccaver (5 February 1884 – 23 September 1958) was a British-American operatic tenor. He was particularly noted for his performances as Rodolfo in Giacomo Puccini's \"La bohème\" and other popular mainstream operatic roles.\nEarly years.\nPiccaver was born on 5 February 1884 in the Lincolnshire town of Long Sutton to chemist Frederick Herman Piccaver (born 1864, died 17 February 1916) and his wife Sarah Ann Sissons. The Piccavers had been farm laborers, but there were also claims of Spanish" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "ancestry dating back to the Spanish Armada. At a young age, Alfred emigrated with his family to the United States of America. The family resettled in Albany, NY and took American citizenship. Frederick Piccaver worked as head brewer of the Beverwyck Brewery. Alfred joined the choir of Albany's St. Peter's Episcopal Church as a boy soprano. He also became a soloist at the North Reformed Church in Watervliet. The young Piccaver went on to study voice with S. Graham Nobbes, who had been chief instructor of the Emma Willard" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph)\nE.g.\n\"Solow Building\" == \"Solow Building\nThe Solow Building, located at 9 West 57th Street, is a Manhattan skyscraper built in 1974 and designed by Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill. It is located just west of Fifth Avenue between 57th and 58th Street, next to the Bergdorf Goodman department store and the Plaza Hotel. \nAt 50 stories and in height, it is the 71st tallest building in New York. For decades, the building's only nearby competitor in height was the GM Building, located one block north and east.\" != \"Administrative Affairs.\nThe Consulate General in Munich is the third largest U.S. diplomatic post in Germany after Berlin and Frankfort.\nArchitecture.\nThe consulate is located in a custom-built office building, the last of the signature modernist U.S. Consulates built in Germany in the 1950s still in service. The work of renowned Bavarian architect Sep Ruf, the building is considered a historic monument. As the main building from 1958 is raised on concrete stilts, the original look was airy and light. Security measures, added several times\"", "Alfred Poell" ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title", "Alfred Poell\nAlfred Poell (18 March 1900 – 30 January 1968) was an Austrian operatic baritone.\nPoell was born in Linz, Austria and studied medicine at the University of Innsbruck and obtained his doctorate there. He practised for a time as a neck specialist. He then turned to vocal studies at the Vienna Music Academy with Philip Forsten and Joseph von Manowarda.\nHe made his operatic debut at the Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Düsseldorf in 1929, where he sang for ten years and where he took part in" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "as Don Ottavio\n- Marianne Schönauer as Donna Anna\n- Fred Hennings as Commendatore\n- Senta Wengraf as Elvira's Maid\n- Walter Berry as Masetto (singing voice)\n- Anny Felbermayer as Zerlina / Donna Anna (singing voice)\n- Gottlob Frick as Commendatore (singing voice)\n- Helmut Krauss\n- Hanna Löser as Donna Elvira (singing voice)\n- Hugo Meyer-Welfing as Don Ottavio (singing voice)\n- Alfred Poell as Don Giovanni (singing voice)\n- Harald Progelhof" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Alwina Valleria" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it:", "Alwina Valleria\nAlwina Valleria (October 12, 1848 – February 17, 1925) was an American-born soprano. She was the first American-born singer to appear in principal roles with the Metropolitan Opera.\nBorn Alwina Schoening in Baltimore, Valleria attended the Royal Academy of Music in London, making her operatic debut in 1871 in St. Petersburg. Following this she appeared in Germany and at La Scala, also singing at Drury Lane in London. A favorite with London audiences, she sang at Her Majesty's Theatre" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title:", "success, both for brilliant singing and for his acting. In this period he created several important roles, notably Phoebus in A. Goring Thomas's \"Esmeralda\" (with Georgina Burns, Clara Perry, William Ludwig, Ben Davies (his operatic debut) and Leslie Crotty, in 1883; next Orso, the hero, in Alexander Mackenzie's \"Colomba\", with Alwina Valleria and Franco Novara, again in 1883; then Waldemar in Goring Thomas's \"Nadeshda\", much acclaimed, with Alwina Valleria, Josephine Yorke and" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Amalia Paoli" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Amalia Paoli\nAmalia Paoli (ca. 1861–1941) was a Puerto Rican soprano. She was the sister of Puerto Rican tenor Antonio Paoli but was herself a recognized musician in her own right.\nFirst years.\nAmalia Paoli was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico. She was the daughter of Domingo Paoli Marcatentti, born in Corsica, and Amalia Marcano Intriago, who was originally from Pampatar, Isla Margarita in Venezuela. Amalia Paoli's parents met in Caracas, and immediately fell in love, however Amalia's father," ] ]
[ [ "Represent the next text", "Puerto Rico to live and work with his sister Amalia, and give voice lessons at the Academia Paoli. Paoli also helped produce \"Othello\" at the Municipal Theater in San Juan. \nFor the next two decades Paoli's main concern was teaching at the Paoli Academy with Amalia. In 1928, the tenor performed Verdi's \"Otello\" in its entirety for the last time in San Juan. This was his last performance on stage. It took place at the San Juan Municipal Theater, known today as the Tapia Theater" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Amelita Galli-Curci" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes!", "Amelita Galli-Curci\nAmelita Galli-Curci (18 November 1882 – 26 November 1963) was an Italian coloratura soprano. She was one of the most popular operatic singers of the 20th century, with her recordings selling in large numbers.\nEarly life.\nShe was born as Amelita Galli into an upper-middle-class Italian family of Spanish heritage in Milan, where she studied piano at the Milan Conservatory, winning a gold medal for piano performance, and at the age of 16 was offered a professorship." ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "ca. 1723–1804), Italian opera singer\n- Filippo Galli (bass) (1783–1853), Italian opera singer\n- Célestine Galli-Marié (1840–1905), French singer\n- Ruggero Galli, Italian opera singer active in the 19th and 20th century\n- Amelita Galli-Curci (1882–1963), Italian opera singer\n- Ida Galli (born 1942), Italian film actress\n- Rosalinda Galli (born 1949), Italian voice actress\nPeople Sports.\n- B. J. Gallis (born 1975), Canadian" ] ]
[ "represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph", "Ana María Martínez" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Ana María Martínez\nAna María Martínez (born 1971) is a Puerto Rican soprano.\nEarly life.\nMartínez was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico; she is the daughter of Puerto Rican opera singer Evangelína Colón and Cuban psychoanalyst Ángel Martínez. Martínez' grandparents originated in Spain and France, and migrated to the Caribbean islands. Martínez grew up with a strict Catholic upbringing. She briefly attended the Boston Conservatory as a musical theater major, but dropped out and later received a bachelor's degree and a master's" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "- Ana María Martínez provides Alessandra's singing voice.\n- Sandro Isaack as Pavel, the orchestra's stagehand who becomes friendly with Gloria.\n- Philip Jackson Smith as Mike Margusa, a friend of Hailey's whom she recruits to work for the orchestra.\n- Christian Coulson as Sebastian, a member of Andrew Walsh's orchestra who later becomes a member of Hailey's orchestra and moves to her flat.\n- Cole Escola as Shawn, Hailey's flatmate and a member of her orchestra who also becomes Sebastian" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Anders J. Dahlin" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Anders J. Dahlin\nAnders J. Dahlin (born March 12, 1975) is a Swedish tenor. He studied at the Music Conservatory in Falun in Sweden, at the Norwegian State Academy of Music in Oslo, and at the Royal Danish Academy of Music in Copenhagen.\nMusic career.\nAlready in 1998 he made his operatic debut at the Norwegian National Opera where he acclaimed much success for his interpretation of Tom Wingfield in Tennessee Williams the Glassmenagerie composed by Antinio Bibalo. In recent years he has become one of the leading" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "form of the opera might have been old-fashioned, the music was not outmoded.\nRecordings.\n- \"Scylla et Glaucus\", Donna Brown (Scylla), Howard Crook (Glaucus), Rachel Yakar (Circé), Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists conducted by John Eliot Gardiner (3 CDs, Erato, 1988)\n- \"Scylla et Glaucus\", Emöke Barath (Scylla), Anders J. Dahlin (Glaucus), Caroline Mutel (Circé), Les Nouveaux Caractères conducted by Sébastien d'Hérin (" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Andrea Gruber" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Andrea Gruber\nAndrea Gruber (born 1966) is an American dramatic soprano particularly admired for her interpretations of the works of Puccini, Verdi, and Wagner.\nEarly life and education.\nAndrea Gruber was born in 1966 in New York City, United States, the daughter of two history professors. She attended the Bank Street School in New York City and the Putney School in Vermont. Later, she studied at the Manhattan School of Music. She won a place in the Metropolitan Opera's Young Artists program in 1989" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Pinchev M, Chaiter Y, Bonner JD, Rennert HS, Greenson JK, Gruber SB. Colorectal polyps in carriers of the APC I1307K polymorphism: [Dis Colon Rectum] 2005 Sep. 22\n- Chaiter Y, Ben Amotz A, Almog R, Low M, Rennert HS, Fischler R, Rosen G, Gruber SB, Rennert G: Smoking attenuates the negative association between carotenoids consumption and colorectal cancer risk- Cancer Causes Control. 2009 Oct;20(8):1327-38. Epub 2009 Jun 27\n- Chaiter Y, Rennert G," ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Andrea Rost" ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Andrea Rost\nAndrea Rost (born June 15, 1962) is a Hungarian lyric soprano. She has performed in leading roles with the Vienna State Opera, La Scala, the Royal Opera House, Opéra National de Paris, the Metropolitan Opera and the Salzburg Festival. The year 1997 saw the release of her first solo recording, \"Le delizie dell’amor\", featuring arias from bel canto, Verdi and Puccini operas.\nBiography.\nAndrea Rost was born in Budapest. She graduated from the Liszt Ferenc Academy of Music" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "O, quam dulcis\", \"Iesum ardentibus\", and \"Ave maris stella from \"Harmonia Caelestis\", sung by Andrea Rost accompanied by the Liszt Ferenc Kamarazenekar." ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Andreas Scholl" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.", "Andreas Scholl\nAndreas Scholl (born 10 November 1967) is a German countertenor, a male classical singer in the alto vocal range, specialising in Baroque music.\nCareer overview.\nBorn into a family of singers, Scholl was enrolled at the age of seven into the boys choir. Aged 13, he was chosen from 20,000 choristers gathered in Rome from around the world to sing solo at a Mass held on 4 January 1981. Just four years later, Scholl was offered a place at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis," ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title.", "been professor of voice at the Hochschule für Musik Mainz.\nRecordings.\n- Alessandro Grandi: \"Vulnerasti cor meum: Sacred music by Alessandro Grandi\", Schola Cantorum Basiliensis (Elisabeth Scholl, Maria Cristina Kiehr, René Jacobs, Andreas Scholl, Gerd Türk, Otto Rastbichler, Ulrich Messthaler), conductor René Jacobs, (Deutsche Harmonia Mundi) 1991\n- Handel: \"Athalia\", Elisabeth Scholl (Athalia), Junge Kantorei, Barockorchester Frankfurt, Joachim Carlos Martini (Naxos) 1996\n- Bach: \"" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Andrzej Dobber" ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Andrzej Dobber\nAndrzej Dobber (born May 28, 1961 in Więcbork, Poland) is an operatic baritone.\nAndrzej Dobber studied singing under Prof. Helena Lazarska at the Academy of Music in Krakow and continued his training at the Nuremberg Conservatory. He came second in both the 1983 International Dvorák Competition in Karlsbad and in the 1986 Ada Sari Competition for the Vocal Arts in Poland.\nReferences.\n- Lyric Opera, \"Rigoletto\" Chicago Feb 25-Mar 10, Lyric debut.\nExternal links.\n- Biography Andrzej Dobber" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Symphony No. 2 is available on compact disc. The most readily available is the Naxos Records CD of the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra of Katowice, the Polish Radio Choir and the Silesian Philharmonic Choir with soloists Zofia Kilanowicz and Andrzej Dobber, conducted by Antoni Wit, which includes \"Beatus Vir\".\nReferences.\n- Thomas, Adrian, \"Górecki, Henryk Mikolaj,\" \"The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Second Edition\" (London: Macmillan Publishers Limited, 2001), 29 vols." ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Andrée Esposito" ]
[ [ "Represent this", "Andrée Esposito\nAndrée Esposito (born February 7, 1934) is a French opera singer, a lyric soprano particularly associated with the French repertory and contemporary works.\nBiography.\nAndrée Esposito was born in Algiers, Algeria, into a family of French-Italian origin. She began her musical studies at the Music Conservatory of her native city, obtaining a first prize there. She\ncompleted her studies at the Paris Music Conservatory, where she was a pupil of Louis Noguéra and Charles Panzéra. She made her professional" ] ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "fantasy dream. Michel is warned that if he returns to his dream and does not wake up, he will be imprisoned in the dream-world forever. Ready to leave his dream, he hears Julietta's voice calling him and despite the nightwatchman's warning declares that he will stay with her. The setting and townsfolk from the start of the opera returns, and Michel remains in the dream-world.\nRecordings.\n- Le Chant du Monde (1962, live in Paris): Charles Bruck, Andrée Esposito" ] ]
[ "represent the term to find more information about it from wikipedia (~1 paragraph).", "Andrés de Segurola" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it:", "Andrés de Segurola\nAndrés Perelló de Segurola (27 March 1874 – 23 January 1953) was a Spanish operatic bass.\nBiography.\nHe was born on 27 March 1874 in Valencia, Spain.\nHe was a member of the Metropolitan Opera Company between 1901 and 1920 and later appeared in many films. He appeared as himself in the 1928 romantic comedy film \"The Cardboard Lover\".\nTowards the end of his career at the Metropolitan Opera, De Segurola also became an impresario. In 1916, he presented" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "11 P-168| $b.5000 (brown) J. Ballivián y Segurola\nprinted by Thomas de La Rue; portrait watermark; type 3 security thread:\n■ 12 P-169| $b.10,000 (purple) Andrés de Santa Cruz\nprinted by Thomas de La Rue; no watermark; no security thread; designs of the 5 and 1 of 1962 with altered denomination and changed colors:\n■ 18 P-170| $b.50,000 (green) Gualberto Villarroel\n■ 19 P-171| $b.100,000 (brownviolet) \"Campesino\" (peasant)\nPaper Bank cheques." ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Angel Blue" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Angel Blue\nAngel Blue (born May 3, 1984) born Angel Joy Blue is an American operatic soprano and classical crossover artist. Blue's voice has been recognized for its shining and agile upper register, \"smoky\" middle register, beautiful timbre, and her ability to switch from a classical to contemporary sound. She has performed internationally and won numerous awards such as Operalia and Miss Hollywood. Plácido Domingo has described Angel as “the next Leontyne Price”.\nCareer.\nAngel Blue has performed lead roles and" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "- \"Jul.\" Nana\n- \"Jul.\" Hellsing\n- 2009\n- \"Jan.\" Tenjho Tenge\n- \"Feb.\" Futari Ecchi\n- \"May.\" Full Moon o Sagashite\n- \"Jul.\" Dna²\n- \"Sep.\" Ranma ½\n- 2010\n- \"Jan.\" Hikaru no Go\n- \"Jan.\" Golgo 13\n- \"Mar.\" Blue Dragon - Ral Ω Grad\n- \"Apr.\" D•N•Angel\n- \"Jun.\" Miyuki-chan in Wonderland (\"\"Miyuki-" ] ]
[ "represent this phrase to find its first wikipedia paragraph", "Angela Denoke" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Angela Denoke\nAngela Denoke (born 27 November 1961, in Stade) is a German opera singer (soprano).\nShe studied at the University of Music and Drama of Hamburg. Her first contract was at the Theater Ulm (1992–1996), where she sang Fiordiligi (\"Cosi fan tutte\"), Donna Anna (\"Don Giovanni\") and Agathe in (\"Der Freischütz\"), among other roles. Angela Denoke sang also the title role in \"Der Rosenkavalier\" at the Theater Ulm, in" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", ".\n- Beatrix Borchard, musicology (from 2002)\n- Margot Guilleaume, voice (1950–78)\n- György Ligeti, composition (1973-1988)\n- Heinz Wunderlich, organ (1919–2012)\nFormer students.\n- Erdoğan Atalay\n- Ingrid Bachér\n- Lisa Batiashvili\n- Hermann Baumann\n- Dagmar Berghoff\n- Oliver Bendt\n- Margit Carstensen\n- Unsuk Chin\n- Xiaoyong Chen\n- Marko Ciciliani\n- Angela Denoke\n- Justus von Dohnányi\n- Christoph Eschenbach\n- Justus" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Angiolina Ortolani-Tiberini" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Angiolina Ortolani-Tiberini\nAngiolina Ortolani-Tiberini (10 May 1834 – 31 December 1913) was an Italian soprano who sang many leading roles in European opera houses during a career spanning over twenty years. After their marriage in 1858, her career was closely entwined with that of her husband, the tenor Mario Tiberini, with the couple often appearing together on stage. Amongst the roles she created was Ofelia in Franco Faccio's \"Amleto\".\nLife and career.\nOrtolani-Tiberini was born Maria Angela Ortolani Valandris" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "- Salvatore Quasimodo (1901–1968), 1959 Nobel prize in literature\n- Medardo Rosso (1858–1928), sculptor\n- Piero Sacerdoti (1905-1966), insurer\n- Temistocle Solera (1815–1878), poet, opera composer, librettist\n- Mario Tiberini (1826–1880) and his wife Angiolina Ortolani-Tiberini (1834–1913), opera singers.\n- Arturo Toscanini (1867–1957), conductor and cellist\n- Filippo Turati (1857–1932), politician\n- Leo Valiani (1909–1999), writer, politician\n-" ] ]
[ "represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its wikipedia page:", "Ann Turner Robinson" ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Ann Turner Robinson\nAnn Turner Robinson (née Turner; died 5 January 1741, London) was an English soprano of the 18th century.\nLife.\nShe was the youngest daughter of William Turner, a composer and countertenor who was a contemporary of Henry Purcell, and is best remembered for her association with the composer George Frideric Handel, in whose operas she sang.\nOn 6 September 1716 she married the organist John Robinson. They had a daughter who had a singing career, and other children who died young" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "2013–15 David Quinn (previously Organ Scholar, St Peter's College, Oxford)\n- 2015–2017 Edward Turner (previously Organ Scholar, Tewkesbury Abbey)\n- Sep 2017-Dec 2017 Joe Watson\n- Jan 2018-Jul 2018 Benjamin Mills\n- 2018-present Anthony Gray (previously organ scholar, Bradford Cathedral, Robinson College, Cambridge)\nTruro Cathedral.\nThe Diocese of Truro was established in 1876 and Truro Cathedral was consecrated in 1887. The parish church of St Mary the Virgin occupied the site before the cathedral was built, and had" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph):", "Anna Case" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Anna Case\nAnna Case (October 29, 1887 – January 7, 1984; aged 95) was an American soprano. She recorded with Thomas Alva Edison, who used her voice extensively in \"tone tests\" of whether a live audience could tell the difference between the actual singer and a recording. In addition to recordings for Edison Records on both phonograph cylinder and Diamond Disc, Case recorded for Victor and Columbia Records, and made sound film for Vitaphone.\nBiography.\nShe was born on October 29, 1887" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Derailed\"). This case requires game patch 1.01 (it can be installed if the PC has an active internet connection). Mac Taylor becomes the prime suspect on the case when his DNA is discovered all over the body of a dead man.\nCast members of the popular TV show including Gary Sinise, Melina Kanakaredes, Carmine Giovinazzo, Hill Harper, Eddie Cahill, Anna Belknap, Robert Joy, and A. J. Buckley reprised their roles for the videogame and recorded in Los Angeles with voice director Timothy Cubbison." ] ]
[ "", "Anna Fitziu" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Anna Fitziu\nAnna Fitziu (April 1, 1887 – April 20, 1967) was an American soprano who had a prolific international opera career during the early part of the 20th century. Her signature roles included Fiora in \"L'amore dei tre re\", Mimi in \"La Boheme\", Nedda in \"Pagliacci\", and the title roles in \"Isabeau\", \"Madama Butterfly\", and \"Tosca\". After her singing career ended, she embarked on a second career as a voice teacher. Among her" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "to portray a number of smaller roles in the musical comedy \"The Wizard\". She remained in Chicago through 1904 appearing in leading roles in operettas and musical comedies like \"Baroness Fiddlesticks\" and \"Sergeant Brue\". From 1905 to 1906, she performed on the American vaudeville circuit.\nOpera career.\nIn 1906 Fitziu went to Paris where she studied singing with William Thorn for several years. She adopted the stage name \"Anna Fitziu\" when she made her first opera appearance in 1910 at the Teatro Dal Verme" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Anna Leese" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes.", "Anna Leese\nAnna Leese (born 7 March 1981) is a New Zealand born soprano opera singer based in Tuscany. She made her debut at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden in 2006, as understudy for the part of Musetta in Giacomo Puccini's \"La bohème\". She returned to sing the part in her own right in 2008.\nShe graduated and earned multiple prizes at the University of Otago, plus the 2002 Mobil Song Quest and the Sydney McDonald's Aria before moving to London to study toward a graduate" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Oct 1941 Lieutenant-General Vyvyan Pope\n- Nov 1941 – Jul 1942 Lieutenant-General Willoughby Norrie\n- Jul–Sep 1942 Lieutenant-General William Ramsden\n- Sep 1942 – Dec 1943 Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese\n- Jan–Jul 1944 Lieutenant-General Gerard Bucknall\n- Aug 1944 – Dec 1945 Lieutenant-General Brian Horrocks\n- Dec 1945 – Sep 1946 Lieutenant-General Alexander Galloway\nSee also.\n- Battle of Gazala\nReferences.\n- Forty, George, \"British Army Handbook" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Anna Renzi" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Anna Renzi\nAnna Renzi ( – after 1661) was an Italian soprano renowned for her acting ability as well as her voice, who has been described as the first diva in the history of opera.\nCareer.\nBorn in Rome, Anna Renzi made her debut in 1640 at the Palazzo Pallavicini-Rospigliosi of the French ambassador, in the presence of Cardinal Richelieu, as Lucinda in \"Il favorito del principe\" (music lost) by and the young composer Filiberto Laurenzi who continued to function as her teacher and/or" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "unions, especially of the CGIL, which defends only the already protected, while, on the other, he will sharply attack the vested powers, bankers, \"Confindustria\" and a certain type of capitalism.\"\n\"The Telegraph\" referred to Renzi as \"a prominent centrist voice in Europe\".\nRenzi has occasionally been compared to former British Prime Minister Tony Blair for his political views. Renzi himself has previously cited Blair as an inspiration for him, and claims to be a supporter of Blair's ideology of" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Annette Dasch" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Annette Dasch\nAnnette Dasch (born 24 March 1976) is a German soprano. She performs in operas and concerts.\nBiography.\nBorn in Berlin, Annette Dasch studied voice at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München with Josef Loibl.\nShe made her debut at the Bavarian State Opera as the Gänsemagd (Goose girl) in Humperdinck's \"Königskinder\", at La Scala as Elvira in Mozart's \"Don Giovanni\", at the Salzburg Festival 2006 as Aminta in his \"Il re pastore\", staged" ] ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title", "Cho\n- 2012 Piano Lorenzo Soulès\n- 2011 Composition Artur Akshelyan\n- 2011 Quartet Armida Quartet (ex aequo)\n- 2011 Quartet Hermès Quartet (ex aequo)\n- 2010 Piano Mami Hagiwara\n- 2009 Voice Pasztircsák Polina\n- 2008 Cello István Várdai\n- 2005 Viola Ryszard Groblewski\n- 2002 Percussion Aiyun Huang\n- 2002 Piano Sergey Koudriakov\n- 2001 Flute Silvia Careddu\n- 2001 Piano Roland Krüger\n- 2000 Voice Annette Dasch (ex aequo)\n- 2000 Voice Werner Erik Nelson (ex" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph:", "Anselmo Colzani" ]
[ [ "represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Anselmo Colzani\nAnselmo Colzani (March 28, 1918, Budrio – March 19, 2006, Milan) was an Italian operatic baritone who had an international opera career from the late 1940s through 1980. He particularly excelled in the Italian repertory and was most associated with the works of Giuseppe Verdi and Giacomo Puccini. He began his career in Italy in 1947 where he quickly became a regular presence at that country's best opera houses, including La Scala. In the mid-1950s he began appearing at major opera houses throughout Europe and the" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Anselmo Colzani. \"The Times\" said that, \"Frank Guarrera was a rare all-rounder, a singer whose competence, versatility, intelligence, good stage presence and the absence of inflated ideas of his own importance made him a valued colleague and the kind of stalwart company member that opera managers dream about.\"\nEarly life and career.\nFrank Guarrera was born in Philadelphia to parents of Sicilian origin. He was first exposed to opera at the Victor Café in South Philadelphia, and his earliest performance experiences were" ] ]
[ "Represent this text", "Anthony Rolfe Johnson" ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:", "Anthony Rolfe Johnson\nAnthony Rolfe Johnson (5 November 1940 – 21 July 2010) was an English operatic tenor.\nEarly life.\nAnthony Rolfe Johnson was born in Tackley in Oxfordshire. As a boy, he demonstrated musical ability and sang as a boy soprano, making a record with HMV. Despite his ability, he did not consider singing as a career and instead went to study for an agricultural degree. He worked as a farm manager, and would sing church hymns to his herd of cows. He joined" ] ]
[ [ "represent this wikipedia passage to find its title:", "voice at Wellesley College.\nAccording to Sheehan, he has been most inspired by Aksel Schiøtz and Anthony Rolfe Johnson.\nCareer Reception.\nSheehan has been described as \"one of the leading Early Music singers in the world\" by Marion Dry, the director of Wellesley College's music performance program. The \"Boston Globe\" has lauded Sheehan as \"superb: his tone classy, clear, and refined, encompassing fluid lyricism and ringing force\". In a review of the Boston Early Music Festival's 2015 staging of" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Anthony Stuart Lloyd" ]
[ [ "represent the next text.", "Anthony Stuart Lloyd\nAnthony Stuart Lloyd (born 1966, Cardiff) is a Welsh baritone opera singer from Wales.\nLloyd attended Ysgol Gyfun Gymraeg Glantaf, and later studied at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. He was house principal bass baritone at Freiburg Opera House in Germany, and has performed several roles for Welsh National Opera, as well as appearing in the West End production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat as Jacob.\nExternal links" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it.", "The Voice from the Minaret\nThe Voice from the Minaret is a 1923 American silent romantic drama film directed by Frank Lloyd and starring Norma Talmadge, Eugene O'Brien, and Winter Hall. The film is based on the play of the same name by Robert Smythe Hichens (London, Sep 1919). The film is considered lost.\nPlot.\nLady Adrienne Carlyle (Norma Talmadge) leaves Mumbai, where her tyrannical husband, lord Leslie Carlyle, is the governor, heading off to England. On board, Lady Adrienne" ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph)", "Anton Mitterwurzer" ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Anton Mitterwurzer\nAnton Mitterwurzer (1818–76) was a German opera singer, a noted baritone interpreter of the works of Gluck, Marschner, and Wagner.\nBiography.\nMitterwurzer was born in Sterzing, Tyrol and made his first theatrical appearance at Innsbruck. He was engaged at the age of twenty-one in Dresden and stayed there for thirty years, greatly influencing operatic methods. Mitterwurzer was at his best in Wagnerian roles like Wolfram, Telramund, and Hans Sachs." ] ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "The Magic Face\nThe Magic Face is a 1951 American drama film directed by Frank Tuttle and written by Mort Briskin and Robert Smith. The film stars Luther Adler, Patricia Knight, William L. Shirer, Jaspar von Oertzen, Anton Mitterwurzer and Peter Preses. The film was released on August 13, 1951, by Columbia Pictures.\nCast.\n- Luther Adler as Rudi Janus / Janus the Great / Adolf Hitler\n- Patricia Knight as Vera Janus\n- William L. Shirer as Himself\n- Jaspar von Oertzen as" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page", "Anton Sistermans" ]
[ [ "", "Anton Sistermans\nAnton Sistermans (5 August 186518 March 1926) was a Dutch baritone during the late 19th-early 20th century. He is particularly notable for interpretations of lieder and oratorios. During his career, Sistermans premiered important compositions by Johannes Brahms and Gustav Mahler, and also had lieder dedicated to him by Hans Pfitzner, Eugen d'Albert and Alexander von Zemlinsky. In his later years, Sistermans served as a teacher at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague and conductor of a church choir in Rotterdam.\nBiography.\nAnton" ] ]
[ [ "Represent this paragraph to retrieve the one term that is most relevant to it", "Tag meines Lebens\", Op. 13/2\n- Alexander von Zemlinsky: Thirteen Songs, Op. 2\nAnton Sistermans died in the Hague in 1926, aged 60.\nExternal links.\n- Anton Sistermans 401dutchdivas.nl 2007" ] ]
[ "Represent this input to retrieve the first passage from its Wikipedia page.", "Antonello Palombi" ]
[ [ "Represent this Wikipedia passage to find its title", "Antonello Palombi\nAntonello Palombi (born in Spoleto, Italy) is an Italian operatic tenor.\nPalombi joined the Carabinieri, Italy’s paramilitary police force, when he was 20. (His father was also in the Carabinieri). While stationed in Perugia and Florence, he also sang in the cathedral choir of Todi. At the suggestion of the choirmaster there, he decided to study singing seriously. After private lessons he made his debut in 1990, as Pinkerton in \"Madama Butterfly\" in the small German city of" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Old Stage. His work with the Royal Danish Opera since then has included conducting all of Puccini's operas as well as several other main works, including Aida for the inauguration of the new Copenhagen Opera House in 2005.\nIn 2008 Bellincampi's contract with the Danish National Opera, otherwise running until 2010, was extended until 2013. In Aarhus he has also conducted a numerous concerts and collaborated with leading international names such as Angela Gheorghiu, Joseph Calleja, Antonello Palombi and Bryn Terfel as well as regularly worked with soloists such" ] ]
[ "Represent this phrase to find its first Wikipedia paragraph", "Antonietta Pastori" ]
[ [ "represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Antonietta Pastori\nAntonietta Pastori (born in 1929) is an Italian operatic soprano, particularly associated with lighter lyric and coloratura roles.\nBorn in Milan, Antonietta Pastori studied piano and singing at the Milan Conservatory. She made her debut at the Teatro Nuovo in 1951, as Gilda in \"Rigoletto\", and at La Scala in 1956, in Niccolò Piccinni's opera \"La buona figliuola\". She was a regular guest at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples, as well as other theatres in Italy.\nShe" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:", "of the Teatro alla Scala. In 1951, he made his official operatic debut at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples as Elvino in \"La sonnambula\", a role he will remain closely associated with throughout his career.\nHe sang widely in Italy, appearing in \"Le comte Ory\" at the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino in Florence in 1952. In 1954, he appeared in an Italian television production of \"Il barbiere di Siviglia\", opposite Rolando Panerai and Antonietta Pastori.\nHis career quickly took an international turn." ] ]
[ "Represent the term to find more information about it from Wikipedia (~1 paragraph).", "Antonio Francesco Carli" ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes", "Antonio Francesco Carli\nAntonio Francesco Carli (fl. 1706–23) was an Italian bass singer, primarily of operatic roles. He is best remembered for having sung the role of Claudius in the original production of George Frideric Handel's early success \"Agrippina\". Carli sung in many different Italian cities, including Rome, Bologna, Turin, and Florence, though he primarily worked at Venice between 1706–18 and 1722-3. The part of Claudius demands a bass possessed of an exceptionally wide tessitura and one who is able to perform" ] ]
[ [ "Represent the text to find the scientific term it describes:", "Carli (16 Dec 1754 – 24 Feb 1761 Died)\n- Girolamo Clarelli (6 Apr 1761 – 18 Jun 1764 Died)\n- Giovanni de Vita (26 Nov 1764 – 1 Apr 1774 Died)\n- Vincenzo Ferretti (17 Jul 1775 – 20 Sep 1779 Appointed Bishop of Rimini)\n- Saverio Marini (20 Sep 1779 – 6 Jan 1813 Died)\n- Carlo Fioravanti (26 Sep 1814 – 13 Jul 1818 Died)\n- Francesco Saverio (François-Xavier) Pereira (2 Oct 1818 –" ] ]