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[ "Anderson County", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Kentucky" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Anderson County<\e1> and <e2>Kentucky<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,611
[ "Anderson County", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Anderson County<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,612
[ "Kentucky", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kentucky<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,614
[ "Kentucky", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kentucky<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,615
[ "Coke", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Coke<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,617
[ "County Tyrone", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Northern Ireland" ]
Find the relation between <e1>County Tyrone<\e1> and <e2>Northern Ireland<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,618
[ "Kentucky River", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Kentucky" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kentucky River<\e1> and <e2>Kentucky<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,619
[ "Prohibition", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Prohibition<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,620
[ "Lawrenceburg", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Lawrenceburg<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,621
[ "Lawrenceburg", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Kentucky" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Lawrenceburg<\e1> and <e2>Kentucky<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,623
[ "Ripy Brothers Distillery", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Kentucky" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Ripy Brothers Distillery<\e1> and <e2>Kentucky<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,624
[ "Ripy Brothers Distillery", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Ripy Brothers Distillery<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,625
[ "Lawrenceburg", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Anderson County" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Lawrenceburg<\e1> and <e2>Anderson County<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,626
[ "Prohibition", "applies to jurisdiction", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Prohibition<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
applies to jurisdiction
null
23,627
[ "Streamville", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Streamville<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,628
[ "Tyrone", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tyrone<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,629
[ "Tyrone", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Anderson County" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tyrone<\e1> and <e2>Anderson County<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,630
[ "Kentucky River", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kentucky River<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,631
[ "Wild Turkey", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Wild Turkey<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
country
null
23,633
[ "Anderson County", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Anderson County<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,634
[ "Coke", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Coke<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,635
[ "Lawrenceburg", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Lawrenceburg<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,636
[ "Ripy Brothers Distillery", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Ripy Brothers Distillery<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,637
[ "Tyrone", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tyrone<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,638
[ "Kentucky River", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Kentucky River<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,639
[ "Tyrone", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Kentucky" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tyrone<\e1> and <e2>Kentucky<\e2>. Tyrone is an unincorporated community located in Anderson County, Kentucky, United States. It is located east of Lawrenceburg along the Kentucky River. A distillery was opened circa 1868 and acquired by T.B.Ripy, who expanded the facility. The town is named after County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, where the Ripy family was from. The community was originally called Streamville, but was eventually renamed, sometime after the distillery was so named in 1883. In 1905, the sons of T.B.Ripy opened the Ripy Brothers Distillery. The population of the village reached 1,000 before Prohibition. The distillery closed, but was later re - opened and is now where Wild Turkey (bourbon) is manufactured. Its post office was opened in 1882 as Coke (the name of the postmaster), was renamed Tyrone in 1893, and is now closed.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
23,640
[ "Gary Matthews", "member of sports team", "Phillies" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gary Matthews<\e1> and <e2>Phillies<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
member of sports team
null
23,804
[ "Sarge Ferris", "country of citizenship", "American" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Sarge Ferris<\e1> and <e2>American<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
country of citizenship
null
23,812
[ "Lewis Sargentich", "employer", "Harvard Law School" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Lewis Sargentich<\e1> and <e2>Harvard Law School<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
employer
null
23,813
[ "Charles Rangel", "country of citizenship", "American" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Charles Rangel<\e1> and <e2>American<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
country of citizenship
null
23,814
[ "Tony Schumacher", "country of citizenship", "American" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Tony Schumacher<\e1> and <e2>American<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
country of citizenship
null
23,816
[ "Norris Coleman", "country of citizenship", "American" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Norris Coleman<\e1> and <e2>American<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
country of citizenship
null
23,819
[ "Orville Moody", "country of citizenship", "American" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Orville Moody<\e1> and <e2>American<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
country of citizenship
null
23,820
[ "Korean War", "participant", "American" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Korean War<\e1> and <e2>American<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
participant
null
23,821
[ "Korean War", "participant", "Charles Rangel" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Korean War<\e1> and <e2>Charles Rangel<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
participant
null
23,823
[ "American", "participant of", "Korean War" ]
Find the relation between <e1>American<\e1> and <e2>Korean War<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
participant of
null
23,824
[ "Charles Rangel", "participant of", "Korean War" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Charles Rangel<\e1> and <e2>Korean War<\e2>. Sarge is the nickname of :Paul Chambers (footballer) (born 1982), Australian rules footballerNorris Coleman (born 1961), American retired basketball player nicknamed " The Sarge "Sarge Ferris (1928 - 1989), American poker playerGary Matthews (born 1950), former Major League Baseball player and coach, and current Phillies broadcasterBrad McCrimmon (1959 - 2011), Canadian National Hockey League player and coachOrville Moody (1933 - 2008), American golferCharles Rangel (born 1930), American politician, lawyer and Korean War soldierMitchell Sargent (born 1979), Australian former rugby league footballerLewis Sargentich, professor at Harvard Law SchoolTony Schumacher (drag racer) (born 1969), American drag racer
participant of
null
23,825
[ "Joel Mandelstam FRS", "place of birth", "Johannesburg" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Joel Mandelstam FRS<\e1> and <e2>Johannesburg<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
place of birth
null
24,504
[ "Joel Mandelstam FRS", "educated at", "Jeppe High School for Boys" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Joel Mandelstam FRS<\e1> and <e2>Jeppe High School for Boys<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
educated at
null
24,505
[ "Joel Mandelstam FRS", "employer", "Oxford" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Joel Mandelstam FRS<\e1> and <e2>Oxford<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
employer
null
24,508
[ "Joel Mandelstam FRS", "country of citizenship", "British" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Joel Mandelstam FRS<\e1> and <e2>British<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
country of citizenship
null
24,509
[ "King’s College of Household and Social Science", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "London" ]
Find the relation between <e1>King’s College of Household and Social Science<\e1> and <e2>London<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,510
[ "Linacre College", "country", "British" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Linacre College<\e1> and <e2>British<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
country
null
24,512
[ "Oxford", "country", "British" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Oxford<\e1> and <e2>British<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
country
null
24,513
[ "Oxford", "has part(s)", "Linacre College" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Oxford<\e1> and <e2>Linacre College<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
has part(s)
null
24,514
[ "John Yudkin", "employer", "King’s College of Household and Social Science" ]
Find the relation between <e1>John Yudkin<\e1> and <e2>King’s College of Household and Social Science<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
employer
null
24,515
[ "Joel Mandelstam FRS", "educated at", "University of the Witwatersrand" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Joel Mandelstam FRS<\e1> and <e2>University of the Witwatersrand<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
educated at
null
24,516
[ "Linacre College", "part of", "Oxford" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Linacre College<\e1> and <e2>Oxford<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
part of
null
24,517
[ "Linacre College", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "British" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Linacre College<\e1> and <e2>British<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,518
[ "Oxford", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "British" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Oxford<\e1> and <e2>British<\e2>. Joel Mandelstam FRS (13 November 1919 – 20 December 2008) was a British microbiologist, a Professor, at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. He was a pioneer in using bacteria to study fundamental biological phenomena — such as development, differentiation, and the turnover of macromolecules — which had more usually been investigated in higher organisms. Born in Johannesburg, and educated at the Jeppe High School for Boys, his parents were Lithuanian Jews. He attended the University of the Witwatersrand, where he read for an honours BSc degree. After graduating in 1942, he worked as a research assistant at the Medical school in Johannesburg. Amongst others, he taught Sydney Brenner there. He came to London in 1947 to work for a PhD under John Yudkin at King ’s College of Household and Social Science in London (which became Queen Elizabeth College in 1953). From 1966 until his retirement in 1987 he was Iveagh Professor of Chemical Microbiology at the University of Oxford, where he built up a highly successful research group studying spore formation in bacteria.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,519
[ "Victoria", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Victoria<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,662
[ "Hadfield", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Victoria" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hadfield<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,665
[ "Memorial Park", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Memorial Park<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,666
[ "Gowrie", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gowrie<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,667
[ "Upfield", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Victoria" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Upfield<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,668
[ "Fawkner Cemetery", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Victoria" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Cemetery<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,669
[ "Fawkner Cemetery", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Cemetery<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,670
[ "Fawkner Crematorium", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Crematorium<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,671
[ "Victoria", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Victoria<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,672
[ "Victoria", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Melbourne" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Victoria<\e1> and <e2>Melbourne<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,673
[ "Melbourne", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Victoria" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Melbourne<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,674
[ "Melbourne", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Melbourne<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,675
[ "Hadfield", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hadfield<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,676
[ "Platform 2", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Platform 2<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,677
[ "Upfield", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Upfield<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,678
[ "Upfield", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Melbourne" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Upfield<\e1> and <e2>Melbourne<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,679
[ "Fawkner Cemetery", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Melbourne" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Cemetery<\e1> and <e2>Melbourne<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,680
[ "Memorial Park", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Victoria" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Memorial Park<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,681
[ "Somerton", "country", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Somerton<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
country
null
24,682
[ "Fawkner Crematorium", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Victoria" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Crematorium<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,683
[ "Gowrie", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Victoria" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gowrie<\e1> and <e2>Victoria<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,684
[ "Hadfield", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Melbourne" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hadfield<\e1> and <e2>Melbourne<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,686
[ "Memorial Park", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Memorial Park<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,687
[ "Gowrie", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gowrie<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,688
[ "Fawkner Cemetery", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Cemetery<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,689
[ "Fawkner Crematorium", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Crematorium<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,690
[ "Melbourne", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Melbourne<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,691
[ "Hadfield", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hadfield<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,692
[ "Platform 2", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Platform 2<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,693
[ "Upfield", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Upfield<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,694
[ "Somerton", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Australia" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Somerton<\e1> and <e2>Australia<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,695
[ "Gowrie", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Melbourne" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Gowrie<\e1> and <e2>Melbourne<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,696
[ "Memorial Park", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Melbourne" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Memorial Park<\e1> and <e2>Melbourne<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,697
[ "Fawkner Crematorium", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Melbourne" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Fawkner Crematorium<\e1> and <e2>Melbourne<\e2>. Fawkner railway station is located on the Upfield line in Victoria, Australia. It serves the northern Melbourne suburb of Hadfield, as well as neighbouring suburb Fawkner. The station opened on 8 October 1889 as Fawkner. It closed on 13 July 1903, reopening on 12 December 1906 as Fawkner Cemetery, and resumed the Fawkner name in 1914. It is located adjacent to the Fawkner Crematorium and Memorial Park, which opened in 1906, and from then until 1939, special mortuary trains ran. From October 1914, only seven trains daily ran to Fawkner, as well as the daily mortuary train to the cemetery. A former mortuary van is located near the entrance to Platform 2. Until 1959, Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959, to provide a connecting service north to Somerton. Until 1998, the station had one platform (present day Platform 2). The second track and Platform 1 were added as part of the duplication of the line between Fawkner and Gowrie.
located in the administrative territorial entity
null
24,698
[ "Have You Ever Been in Love", "part of", "A New Day Has Come" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e1> and <e2>A New Day Has Come<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
part of
null
24,783
[ "Have You Ever Been in Love", "part of", "One Heart" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e1> and <e2>One Heart<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
part of
null
24,784
[ "Have You Ever Been in Love", "performer", "Dion" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e1> and <e2>Dion<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
performer
null
24,785
[ "A New Day Has Come", "followed by", "One Heart" ]
Find the relation between <e1>A New Day Has Come<\e1> and <e2>One Heart<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
followed by
null
24,788
[ "A New Day Has Come", "performer", "Dion" ]
Find the relation between <e1>A New Day Has Come<\e1> and <e2>Dion<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
performer
null
24,789
[ "One Heart", "follows", "A New Day Has Come" ]
Find the relation between <e1>One Heart<\e1> and <e2>A New Day Has Come<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
follows
null
24,790
[ "One Heart", "performer", "Dion" ]
Find the relation between <e1>One Heart<\e1> and <e2>Dion<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
performer
null
24,791
[ "Dion", "country of citizenship", "Canada" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Dion<\e1> and <e2>Canada<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
country of citizenship
null
24,793
[ "Have You Ever Been in Love", "producer", "Peer Åström" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e1> and <e2>Peer Åström<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
producer
null
24,794
[ "Have You Ever Been in Love", "lyrics by", "Anders Bagge" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e1> and <e2>Anders Bagge<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
lyrics by
null
24,795
[ "Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
country
null
24,796
[ "Los Angeles", "country", "United States" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Los Angeles<\e1> and <e2>United States<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
country
null
24,798
[ "Have You Ever Been in Love", "producer", "Anders Bagge" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e1> and <e2>Anders Bagge<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
producer
null
24,799
[ "Have You Ever Been in Love", "lyrics by", "Peer Åström" ]
Find the relation between <e1>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e1> and <e2>Peer Åström<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
lyrics by
null
24,800
[ "A New Day Has Come", "has part(s)", "Have You Ever Been in Love" ]
Find the relation between <e1>A New Day Has Come<\e1> and <e2>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
has part(s)
null
24,801
[ "One Heart", "has part(s)", "Have You Ever Been in Love" ]
Find the relation between <e1>One Heart<\e1> and <e2>Have You Ever Been in Love<\e2>. " Have You Ever Been in Love " is a song recorded by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion, included first on her seventh English studio album A New Day Has Come (2002) and later, on her eight English studio album One Heart (2003). The song is a power ballad, written by Anders Bagge, Peer Åström, Tom Nichols, Daryl Hall and Laila Bagge, while production was handled by Bagge & Peer. " Have You Ever Been in Love " builds from a gentle, piano - laced opening into a theatrical, string - framed climax. The song received acclaim from music critics, while being reviewed in both albums. Many critics called it a classic - sounding ballad and one of the strongest cuts from the album. Critics also noted similarities between Dion and Barbra Streisand. " Have You Ever Been in Love " was released on 14 April 2003, as One Heart's second (promotional only) single in the United States and Canada, while on 3 November 2003, it was released as the third commercial single in selected European countries. The song spent fourteen weeks at number 2 on the US Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks, setting a record for most weeks at the second position. The music video was shot between 29–30 April 2003 in Los Angeles and released on 2 June 2003.
has part(s)
null
24,802