Unnamed: 0
int64 0
8.55k
| id
stringclasses 17
values | label
int64 0
1
| etc
stringclasses 4
values | text
stringlengths 6
231
|
---|---|---|---|---|
600 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
The cup filled water.
|
601 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
The stone knocked the pole into the road.
|
602 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The tub leaked empty of water.
|
603 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
The stone knocked against the pole into the road.
|
604 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Hail stones broke the window.
|
605 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The force of the wind broke the window.
|
606 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
The window broke from hail stones.
|
607 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The window broke from the force of the wind.
|
608 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
What the force of the wind did to the window was break it.
|
609 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John hit the stone against the wall.
|
610 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John hit the wall with the stone.
|
611 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John tapped some wine from a barrel.
|
612 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John tapped a barrel of some wine.
|
613 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John laid the book on the table.
|
614 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John included his name in the list.
|
615 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John loaded the bricks onto the truck.
|
616 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John loaded the truck with bricks.
|
617 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John fed rice to the baby.
|
618 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John fed the baby rice.
|
619 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John fed the baby up with rice.
|
620 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John fed the baby rice up.
|
621 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The ball lies completely in the box.
|
622 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The box completely contains the ball.
|
623 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The train got to the station fully.
|
624 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The train reached the station fully.
|
625 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Press the stamp against the pad completely.
|
626 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Press the pad with the stamp completely.
|
627 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Spray the paint onto the wall completely.
|
628 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Spray all the paint onto the wall completely.
|
629 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Spray the wall with all the paint.
|
630 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Spray the whole wall with the paint.
|
631 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
What John did to the wall was paint it.
|
632 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
What John did to the whole wall was paint it.
|
633 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
What John did to the wall was hit it.
|
634 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
What the stone did to the wall was hit it.
|
635 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
What the stone did to the whole wall was hit it.
|
636 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John took Bill to be a fool.
|
637 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John concluded Bill to be a fool.
|
638 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Give the bottle to the baby full.
|
639 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Give the bottle to the baby awake.
|
640 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Give the baby the bottle full.
|
641 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Give the baby the bottle awake.
|
642 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Rub the cloth on the baby torn.
|
643 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Rub the cloth on the baby asleep.
|
644 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Rub the baby with the cloth torn.
|
645 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Rub the baby with the cloth asleep.
|
646 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Dry the baby with the cloth asleep.
|
647 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Dry the baby with the cloth torn.
|
648 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
The cup knocked the stone apart.
|
649 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The stone knocked the cup apart.
|
650 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The cup smashed apart against the stone.
|
651 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The stone smashed the cup apart.
|
652 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The tank filled with petrol out of the pump.
|
653 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The cup emptied of water onto the ground.
|
654 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John included her name in the list.
|
655 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John rolled the ball from the tree to the bush.
|
656 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John tapped the bottle of some water.
|
657 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John gave Bill the book.
|
658 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John got the book from Bill.
|
659 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John gave Bill of the book.
|
660 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
We have someone in the living room.
|
661 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John is very fond of Mary.
|
662 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Mary laughed at John.
|
663 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
The ship sank beneath the waves.
|
664 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Mary considers John a fool and Bill a wimp.
|
665 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John regards professors as strange and politicians as creepy.
|
666 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Sue put the books on the table and the records on the chair.
|
667 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Harriet gave a mug to John and a scarf to Vivien.
|
668 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
I expect John to win and Harry to lose.
|
669 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
You eat the fish raw and the beef cooked.
|
670 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
They told Sue who to talk to and Virginia when to leave.
|
671 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Smith loaned, and his widow later donated, a valuable collection of manuscripts to the library.
|
672 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Sue moved, and Mary also transferred, her business to a different location.
|
673 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
I succeeded in convincing, even though John had failed to persuade, Mary not to leave.
|
674 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
We didn't particularly like, but nevertheless ate, the fish raw.
|
675 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Flo desperately wants, though she doesn't really expect, the Miami Dolphins to be in the play-offs.
|
676 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John learned French perfectly.
|
677 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Bill recited his lines poorly.
|
678 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Mary plays the violin beautifully.
|
679 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John perfectly learned French.
|
680 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Bill poorly recited his lines.
|
681 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John learned French immediately.
|
682 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Bill recited his lines slowly.
|
683 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Mary will play the violin soon.
|
684 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John immediately learned French.
|
685 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Bill slowly recited his lines.
|
686 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
Mary will soon play the violin.
|
687 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John immediately learned French perfectly.
|
688 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John learned French perfectly almost immediately.
|
689 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John learned French perfectly immediately.
|
690 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John perfectly learned French immediately.
|
691 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John learned French immediately perfectly.
|
692 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Clearly, John immediately will probably learn French perfectly.
|
693 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Immediately, John probably will clearly learn French perfectly.
|
694 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
Clearly, John perfectly will immediately learn French probably.
|
695 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John perfectly rolled the ball down the hill.
|
696 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John rolled the ball perfectly down the hill.
|
697 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John rolled the ball down the hill perfectly.
|
698 |
bc01
| 0 |
*
|
John perfectly shot the ball.
|
699 |
bc01
| 1 | null |
John shot the ball perfectly.
|
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