Task: Determine whether two given sentences use a target word with the same meaning or different meanings in their respective contexts.##newline##I'll provide some negative and positive examples to teach you how to deal with the task before testing you. Please respond with only "OK" during the examples; when it's your turn, answer only with "True" or "False" without any additioal text. When it's your turn, choose one: "True" if the target word has the same meaning in both sentences; "False" if the target word has different meanings in the sentences. I'll notify you when it's your turn.
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: It is then, when the " grim-visaged " ocean has " smoothed his wrinkled front, " -- when the winds of heaven are hushed to gentle airs, and the cloudless moon looks down upon the scene, tipping the crests of the lazy waves with silver, -- that the memory and imagination of the wanderer are busy; it is then that the scenes of childhood and of manhood -- the forms of friends, more loved because sundered from them by thousands of miles of water and land -- all rise before him in original freshness and beauty.##newline##Sentence 2: , assitant professor of medicine at the University of Maryland, to tip those scales back into shape: * Drink it off: Alcohol is very deydrating, which is a big part of why you feel so rotten.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: -- the thought was a stab to my heart; annihilation, even, would at that moment, have been preferable.##newline##Sentence 2: In a close-fitting dress of flamboyantdesign, all dolled up in a blond Hollywood wig, and swinging a gaudy handbag and hips, she had given herself away by making a brilliant one-handed stab on a near-miss home run lifted foul into the left-field seats by Big John, who, being perfectly sober, had swung late.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She was amiable and good in all ways; the everlasting smile on her face did not belie her heart.##newline##Sentence 2: And in the face of unyielding Arab hostility, its governments have been judged unusually smart and far-sighted.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Lizzy, if I remember right, has a pretty face.##newline##Sentence 2: In the face of such statistics, researchers are exploring which children seem to survive -- even thrive -- after a divorce.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Edited by THOMAS SERGEANT and JOHN C. LOWBER, Esqrs, of the Philadelphia Bar.##newline##Sentence 2: I was tipped off two days ago that I passed the bar.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She was amiable and good in all ways; the everlasting smile on her face did not belie her heart.##newline##Sentence 2: At first he laughs; then the smile fades, and his face reflects his pain.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Jem Duncan I will first of all, tip it to all round.##newline##Sentence 2: Seth swerved so that one of the mirrors tipped and scratched Mary's arm. "##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Why don't you ask him if he'll agree to a stipulation, if we do, that the Cape boy's testimony be made a part of the court record and that we spare the boy -- and ourselves -- another repetitionof that bloody story?##newline##Sentence 2: /z/ Hence was it a principal design of the revelation of which we have the records in the books of the Old Testament, to teach the divine unity; to instruct men in the worship of one God, the eternal, unchangeable, almighty Maker, and Sovereign of the world, the only invisible object of the homage of men; and to draw them off from the imagination, that different beings preside over different parts of nature, or that good and evil spring from different and independent sources, and that the mixture of good and evil, which is seen in the universe, is to be traced to two self-existent, independent, and opposite principles.##newline##Target: record_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She saw her father go round the cottage to enter it, and then picking up her bracelet she approached Alfonzo, who came forth from his hiding place, and clasped her hand.##newline##Sentence 2: WAY TO PICKING UP OUR PAPERS the following Tuesday, Whitey told me that Sandy was worse; the doctor had been to see her.##newline##Target: pick_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Deeds which may tear his heart asunder; hold him Bare to the hissing fools whose good he sought; Draw on his head the laugh of the light crew, Who deem they follow an abusd creed -- Even by themselves misconstrued -- which erst made##newline##Sentence 2: Jill, who had been sitting on the couch with her head resting on Steve's shoulder, sat up, alert. "##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: No, mother; if I do not mistake, the Bachelor's Ball comes up at another season; but however that may be, I am quite sure that any one of the score, to which we have##newline##Sentence 2: Dowis, who hails from Ty Cobb's hometown of Royston, Ga., is quick-footed and quick-witted, able to flip the ball to a trailing halfback at the last split second.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Our own land still spreads out before the enterprising young man so many millions of untilled acres, that it would seem to be a plain indication of Providence, that for some time to come we should be an agricultural people.##newline##Sentence 2: For, first, property need not be constituted by land or material objects.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The smoke curled upward from the chimneys of the suburban districts, and little rustic girls and boys were seen in all directions, hurrying homeward with their arms full of shavings -- old women, too, with their bags of rags, betook themselves somewhere -- Heaven only knows whether they had any homes, or where they went -- at any rate, with backs bent under their awful burdens, they turned into lanes and alleys, and disappeared.##newline##Sentence 2: required to wear professional clothes every day, but at least one brings his clothes in a bag for fear of being beaten up on his way to class. "##newline##Target: bag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: I thought I had just awoke, after the attack which was made upon me by the assassin, when I was on my way to Mr. Marisett's house.##newline##Sentence 2: Develop an adequate passive defense in the form of shelters, civil-defense organizations, and means of rehabilitating the nation after attack.##newline##Target: attack_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: At early dawn, the day following Clifton's receipt of the challenge, a row-boat with two oarsmen and five passengers might be observed moving over the placid surface of the noble river, towards this picturesque and secluded spot; and just as the sunbeams tipped the summit of the mountains, the party disembarked; and Clifton, Ellingbourne, Matthison, Shafton, and the surgeon proceeded to the execution of their hostile purpose.##newline##Sentence 2: tipped the porter, left him to return the airport's borrowed wheelchair, then slammed closed the car trunk and opened the front passenger door with a flourish. "##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: his limbs were stiff, and the region of the stab sore and sensitive to the least touch.##newline##Sentence 2: His stabbing sword flicked out like a viper's tongue.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: It is no disparagement to modern improvements, to say that if our predecessors did not enjoy our advantages for acquiring learning, they did very clearly appreciate its prop.##newline##Sentence 2: Huge, over-the-top props are a favored part of creating the right image.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: More than once some individual has appeared to me with such negligence of labor and such commanding contemplation, a haughty beneficiary begging in the name of God, as made good to the nineteenth century Simeon the Stylite, the Thebais, and the first Capuchins.##newline##Sentence 2: As if his lifelong contemplation of the way disorder violently intrudes upon the blithe assumptions of ordinary men that the world is a logical place were not a serious theme (see Kafka).##newline##Target: contemplation_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: He deals with the parts of the uni verse and the whole of the universe, and he theorizes that things that look like separate parts of the universe emerge out of a pool, which he calls the common pool of information.##newline##Sentence 2: He understands it therefore to be his duty, as a member of the Committee of Com missions, and especially in view of the rules adopted this morning, on the motion of Dr. Alexander, (and he will act on that understanding, unless otherwise expressly directed by the Assembly,) to enrol only such commissioners to the next Assembly as shall come from Presbyteries, now, or at the close of this Assembly, recognised to be component and integral parts of the Presbyterian Church; and that, to the Assembly so constituted, when duly organized for the transaction of business, it will be his duty to report the names of persons claiming to be commissioners from Presbyteries that may be##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: 'd me its brightest hope, its future prop.##newline##Sentence 2: Wallace rolled out all the dramatic props -- national guard, state troopers, edicts?##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Bonaparte in his towering and unjust pride: allowed a single expression, strictly true, and springing from the very excellences of that character which made him the prop of his throne, to outweigh the years of service he had rendered and the glorious victories he had brought to his standard.##newline##Sentence 2: As Maczko continued the paintings in " The Bedroom Series, " her sets and props became more detailed.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She vanishes with the stab of a thick little finger.##newline##Sentence 2: Already a power of iniquity clutches at your children s throat; stabs at their life at their seal s life.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She gave out Three Musketeers bars at our class Halloween party.##newline##Sentence 2: Such, we may safely venture to say, is now the settled judgment of the bar and the country.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: , at 9 ounces, noticeably heavier than even the largest competing products from Palm, it still fits easily in a pocket or purse.##newline##Sentence 2: quite, dry, dip it into a solution of twenty-five grains of iodide of potassium to one ounce of distilled water, drain it, wash it in distilled water and again drain it.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: They cherish a certain cultivated frown, and condemn by a twist of the lip, and are very sure never to praise any who may come within hearing of their praise, or whose proximity might throw their own stature into the shade.##newline##Sentence 2: For a long time, the reader is not told, while the narrator sifts the aging murderer's memories for the quirks of mind and the twists of fate that led to the crisis.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Duncan turned his eyes away, but the lass seized his hands and pressed them to her lips.##newline##Sentence 2: Meanwhile William and I were already on foot, and our mules were led on by the guide's daughter, a pretty little lass of ten or twelve, who accompanied us in the capacity of mule driver.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Handsome, brown-skinned young women, naked from the waist up, working at grain mortars and kettles and looms in the pleasant shade alongside the road, paused and stood up to watch these white men ride in.##newline##Sentence 2: They had spent their last grain of hope on the direction of life; hence they turned in the other.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: At Tucson in 1901, A. E. Douglass began looking at trees for old weather records.##newline##Sentence 2: The boy objected that his father was near, but he was at length prevailed on to go, and after they had fired the tree, and while they were busy killing or taking the squirrels, the hunter suddenly made his appearance, and clasped the strange boy in his arms.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: him to dive, it might be worth the risk.##newline##Sentence 2: The process here described may be very slow in some countries; but in those which, like the United States, have once been familiar with a convertible paper currency, and by that familiarity have been taught to know all its convenience, and to disregard its risks, the paper of private bankers would obtain circulation immediately, if our banking corporations were abolished.##newline##Target: risk_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: On a couple of occasions he arranged for an 18-year-old Negro high-school player from Brooklyn to go out with white dates and thus land in Molinas's hip pocket for an entire college career.##newline##Sentence 2: The boy who arrives at the goal last is then to go in search of th players, after they have agaiji hid themselves.##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: If the injury was in a part of an arm or leg that could be dipped in water, it was dunked, then ice cubes were dropped into the water until the cycle of discomfort ended in numbness.##newline##Sentence 2: There are few parts that * ' may not, and none that will not, be read by women. "##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The records of oratory already form a large component part of American literature. "##newline##Sentence 2: Another explorer who received scant recognition for his discoveries was Antonio de la Roche, the little-known London merchant who was first to sight land which might be regarded as part of Antarctica itself.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Ravens the size of large cats tipped the branches of a nearby oak.##newline##Sentence 2: There are two species or varieties: A. rubra, with shining red berries, and A. alba, with milkwhite berries, tipped with red.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: To go about running into gutters, and poking street-pools and rag-heaps -- and I should'nt wonder if it disagreed with me so much as to make me twist my face and beat myself, and do such goings-on, that every body'll say, Fyler has lost his reason. "##newline##Sentence 2: Not to the Ramallah cousins, who seem familiar with every twist and turn of their family's genealogy.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: So saying, and taking the arm of our hero, bewildered at what he saw and heard, he led him aside, with little David wiping his eyes, and still unable to speak for his emotion, following them close at their heels.##newline##Sentence 2: At his heels is a LITTLE BOY, eager to be helpful, carrying a plastic sand shovel.##newline##Target: heel_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Think how these jolly old cocks tower away, with their shrill whistle, through the tree-tops, and twist and dodge with an agility of wing and thought-like speed, scarcely inferior to the snipe's or swallow's, and fly a half mile if you miss them; and laugh to scorn the efforts of any one to bag them,##newline##Sentence 2: He sat there behind the wheel and drew a long, shuddering breath, watching the first snowflakes of an afternoon flurry twist and skirl across the bright hood.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Her eyes were as bright as stars, and her slender hands, tipped with their pink nails, as white as the lily; her tiny feet, encased in Cinderella slippers of rose-hued satin, peeped out from beneath ample Turkish trousers, which were semi-transparent and disclosed the outlines of her beautifully turned limbs; she wore a close-fitting gilet of pearly silk, adorned with gilt fringe and cut low, displaying her snowy neck and magnificent shoulders; her arms were encompassed but not hidden by flowing sleeves of filmy gauze as fine as the tissue of a spider's web; about her neck flashed a collar of brilliant diamonds of enormous value, and on her tapering fingers were rings of emerald, ruby and sapphire; on her head was a red fez, precisely##newline##Sentence 2: In addition to this day of relative peace in Iraq -- reported attacks were well below average -- the Dec. 15 vote bore another marked contrast to January's violent election day: Sunni Arabs didn't boycott this time and instead turned out en masse, with the hope of tipping the scales of Iraqi political power.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Sambo been a Bosson -- fetch bag powder, maka fire-works -- blow up Fourth o'July -- ha -- ha!##newline##Sentence 2: Separated from the rest of the cleaning articles and trash bag, we SEE a bag full of Dianne's discards -- a long skirt, boots, scarf and poncho.##newline##Target: bag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: In many places the English found the wigwams deserted, and the corn-fields growing to waste, with none to harvest the grain.##newline##Sentence 2: He'd talked to old-timers, read books, and knew what kinds of insects you could put in the grain to eat the insects that ate the grain.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The chisel blade dug deep into the snow, the pressure of his body forcing it deeper and deeper until just as his feet thrust out over the edge of the snow pack, the ax head brought him to a stop.##newline##Sentence 2: colonies to their duty to the king by a general poll-tax of two and sixpence a head.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Having returned their salutations with graceful dignity, he followed them into the camp, when they all sat down to a plentiful repast, consisting of fresh fish and venison, which had that afternoon been taken from pond and surrounding forest by the devoted band, and prepared and kept in readiness, untasted, for the expected reception of their royal leader.##newline##Sentence 2: Old shopping lists and ticket stubs and wads of listed newsprint come falling around Pafko in the faded afternoon.##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: And with this resolve he at once repaired to the carriage, in which he took a seat with the three gentlemen of the committee, leaving me to pick my way as best I could, and drove away for the hotel, (followed at a respectful distance by the loquacious alderman, thus comically mounted,) with this strange string of cattle.##newline##Sentence 2: On impulse, she picked up her cell, called him, and he answered on the third ring. "##newline##Target: pick_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The drought has also turned what promised to be a record British grain harvest into a disaster, lowering harvest expectations from 17.5 million tons to an anticipated 13.8 million.##newline##Sentence 2: They had spent their last grain of hope on the direction of life; hence they turned in the other.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The men divided, some plunging deeper into the forest, in order to gain their stations without giving an alarm, and others Continuing to advance, at a gait that would allow the whole party to go in order; but all devising the best plan to repulse the attack of a dog, or to escape a rifle-bullet.##newline##Sentence 2: " All I know is he had a heart attack.##newline##Target: attack_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: In regard to the cultivation of grains, Mr. King argues from evidence which he considers sufficient, that in the rich alluvial values of California, every species of vege.. table food may be produced, excepting perhaps, the maize, or Indian Corn; and without that irrigation which is essential // upon plains subject to the continued heats of summer.##newline##Sentence 2: (8) angle stitching; (9) curve stitching; (10) concentric stitching: tubular form; (11) tacking (301 and 304 stitches); (12) four-phase work cycle; (13) seaming: quality evaluation; (14) straight seams: grain varia- | Figure tions, seam guides; (15) curved seams: grain variations and curve variations; (16) angular seams: grain and angle variations; and (17) live-phase work cycles.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: He had, moreover, violated one of his own maxims, in talking incessantly while imbibing his liquor; so she took advantage of the next pause in his conversation to leave the table.##newline##Sentence 2: He recalled one of Wallet's mantras: There's no such thing as bad luck, then thought of another maxim. "##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: St. Clare and one or two others made an effort to separate them, and St. Clare received a fatal stab in the side with a bowie-knife, which he was attempting to wrest from one of them.##newline##Sentence 2: As if in recoil from this stab, she angrily turned, my pillar of cloth, and it was alarming, how closely her back resembled her front.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Over all these difficulties, our guide urged his donkey gaily and unconcernedly.##newline##Sentence 2: In North America, as elsewhere, to celebrate Christmas, trees are forced through living room doors and loaded down with an anthropologist's dream of symbolic ornaments-birds, donkeys, candies, stars, and sleighs with fat, bearded gentlemen in strange red suits.##newline##Target: donkey_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Frank took the Doctor to his home, resolved never to part with so faithful and gallant a friend, whose faults had been the faults of unfortunate circumstances, but whose heart, he felt assured, was ' in the right place. '##newline##Sentence 2: At other times they float lazily near the surface, with just their nostrils, eyes, and the upper parts of their heads above the water.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: When an earthquake and tidal wave struck, washing away St. Cyprian's connection with the mainland, its people simply supposed that God had emptied the rest of the world, forgetting the survivors on St. Cyprian like so many grains of salt in an empty bag.##newline##Sentence 2: The holes should be in the direction of the grain of the wood.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: His horse, endowed as it would seem with an instinctive knowledge of what was in the wind, did not so much as champ its bits, much less paw up the ground, or neigh,##newline##Sentence 2: Our contractor called the company several times to get more information, which brings me to the next bit of advice: If you use a kit, make sure the business has a toll free number and someone knowledgeable to advise you over the phone.##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: I thought I had just awoke, after the attack which was made upon me by the assassin, when I was on my way to Mr. Marisett's house.##newline##Sentence 2: In 1835, when Ben Milam ordered an attack on San Antonio, one group refused to obey the order until Arnold could return from a scouting trip to lead them.##newline##Target: attack_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: * A profile of Ku Klux Klan Imperial Wizard Robert M. Shelton, presiding over two Klan rallies and discussing the history and objectives of the Klan.##newline##Sentence 2: One halt was made to remove and change all leather boots, which, in consequence of our late warm weather, had been taken into use, but were now no longer safe; and then, with a rally, the piled-up floe around the cliffs of Cape Walker was reached.##newline##Target: rally_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She then put her hand in again, but very cautiously, and Little Jacket gave it another stab, which made her cry out more loudly than before.##newline##Sentence 2: When it looked like Brady would go in after him, Olivia threw caution aside and raced downhill, ignoring the stabs and jabs of anything that tried to impede her progress.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: " No, just against -- " He puffed out a cloud of tobacco smoke, pausing as he searched for the right word. "##newline##Sentence 2: The title educability, is evidently bad, seeing that every faculty is susceptible of cultivation; in other words, capable of exercise and direction.##newline##Target: word_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: A long line of railroad presidents and superintendents had come to the depot to see him off, and tipped their hats as he glided out into the open air.##newline##Sentence 2: Whichever tether you choose, keep these safety tips in mind: To avoid the risk of strangulation, never leave your child unattended when he's wearing the contraption.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: @@297444 Where the graft comes sweepin ' down the plain Humorist Will Rogers, Oklahoma's favorite son, once joshed a former U.S. Treasury Secretary: " Mac, knowing you was manager of Uncle Sam's Treasury so long, I thought you'd be well heeled. "##newline##Sentence 2: The graft is prepared by cutting it in a sloping manner in a reverse position, so that when placed on the cut of the stock it forms a neat splice.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Her eyes were as bright as stars, and her slender hands, tipped with their pink nails, as white as the lily; her tiny feet, encased in Cinderella slippers of rose-hued satin, peeped out from beneath ample Turkish trousers, which were semi-transparent and disclosed the outlines of her beautifully turned limbs; she wore a close-fitting gilet of pearly silk, adorned with gilt fringe and cut low, displaying her snowy neck and magnificent shoulders; her arms were encompassed but not hidden by flowing sleeves of filmy gauze as fine as the tissue of a spider's web; about her neck flashed a collar of brilliant diamonds of enormous value, and on her tapering fingers were rings of emerald, ruby and sapphire; on her head was a red fez, precisely##newline##Sentence 2: As far as anyone knew for certain, the snitch who tipped off Sneed was never discovered.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: This afternoon we were given presentations and speeches in a windowless conference room crowded with desks and plastic chairs.##newline##Sentence 2: Every afternoon the Dissenters crowded to a simpler worship, 204 James had waited twenty-four hours, expecting, as it should seem, the performance of Lundy's promises; and in twenty-four hours the arrangements for the defence of Londonderry were complete.##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: He lands, head first, sprawling into the cops and knocking about half of them off their feet.##newline##Sentence 2: The Catholic army (says Antonio Agapida) entered Moclin in solemn state, not as a licentious host intent upon plunder and desolation, but as a band of Christian warriors coming to purify and regenerate the land.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: At least I've got a window seat on the left side of the plane, which, according to the flight attendant, should help me get a quick peek at Pearl Harbor right before we land and maybe even Diamond Head after we take off again.##newline##Sentence 2: /q/ Where this intersects at d is the apparent size of this side, because it is parallel with the ground plane.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: You ought to send that stuff direct, " the card player said. "##newline##Sentence 2: One volunteers to be the player, who is called Tag: it is the object of the other players to run from and avoid him.##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Among its first official acts was the appointment of a committee to probe graft.##newline##Sentence 2: When the old trees already mentioned (which have doubtless been raised from seed) begin to blossom, plants reared from them by cuttings or grafts, will, of course, produce blossoms and fruit much more speedily than when reared from##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Footnotes The women, whether married, or about to be married, have, what they call, a quilting, which corresponds exactly, with this.##newline##Sentence 2: Trees and vines around the buildings create a quilt in shades of green that expands out to the end of visibility.##newline##Target: quilt_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: look at your money-bags, for they tell the Gineral you han't got stuff enuff in the Bank to make him a pair of spectacles; none of your rags, ' says I, but the real grit: ' and with that he call'd 2 or 3 chaps in Quaker coats, and they open'd a large place about as big as the east room; ' and such a sight I never see -- boxes, bags, and kegs, all full, and I should say nigh upon a hundred cord.##newline##Sentence 2: the rag bag hanging from a nail in the wall. "##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: As far as anyone knew for certain, the snitch who tipped off Sneed was never discovered.##newline##Sentence 2: There are two species or varieties: A. rubra, with shining red berries, and A. alba, with milkwhite berries, tipped with red.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: from Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and minor poems (1829) 1 Romance who loves to nod and sing With drowsy head and folded wing Among the green leaves as they shake Far down within some shadowy lake To me a painted paroquet Hath been -- a most familiar bird -- Taught me my alphabet to say -- To lisp my very earliest word While in the wild wood I did lie A child -- with a most knowing eye.##newline##Sentence 2: " I feel responsible, " he said, shaking his head. "##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Some of our amateur fencers, single-stick players, and boxers, we have no reason to be ashamed of.##newline##Sentence 2: Only nine players came out for the team last year, and none was named McDuffy. "##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: the chef d'oeuvre of ancient eloquence, and by a very interesting course of lectures on English Oratory.##newline##Sentence 2: A traditional recipe is given in chapter 4, but, as noted there, different herbs and vegetables can be used, depending on the type of fish being prepared, the region, and the whim of the chef.##newline##Target: chef_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She's sitting at the bar with Mitch, tossing her hair and laughing and moving her long fingers up his biceps.##newline##Sentence 2: O how wortliless, how contemptible will all the kingdoms of the world, and all the glory of them seem to a man on a bed of pain, in the gate of death, at the bar##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The boys had planted their feet on a little bit of an island, around which the water gurgled; and Clapham, turning his eyes from the brook to the wooded hills, lit up with a shower of golden light, said, " Hal, is not this here brook a pretty kind of looking-glass? "##newline##Sentence 2: Essentially a drill is a scraping instrument, while the auger bit cuts and must therefore have a cutting edge.##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Make your game, gentlemen, " said this individual, " while the ball spins.##newline##Sentence 2: As always, the ball exploded off his club face and rode the soft wind to disappear beyond the sloping fairway and run a dozen yards farther, leaving him a short iron to the green.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: must heave anchor -- for as I tipped you a glass or so since, the little gentleman who's rigged in black velvethath shipped the province a new ruler -- but the dog is wind bound at Catsdown, and be damned to him: thof diabolo, his convoy parting company, hath brought to in the very jaw of the sound; we slipt her in the fog, and were it not for policy, in spite of her iron teeth, we'd muzzle her -- but d'ye see, they might send the despatch in a leaden cannister to the sea's bottom; so mark me, Dutchman, without spinning a long yarn, we must have her papers or our jig's up; for thof we have friends in Old England, as Kid says, who will bring us off, it is hard to treat with the conqueror after the flag's down: now ere I steered here, a canoe rowed for the creek in which was the king's messenger; the galliot herself, I##newline##Sentence 2: Robert J. C. Butow describes the dire situation as of the end of 1944: //... the scales of war had been tipped so steeply against the Japanese that no counterweights at their disposal could possibly have balanced them.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: He seemed to be wearing a green silk tunic, not too clean, and not long enough, for she could see the complex heap of his private parts in the very centre of her rosy bed.##newline##Sentence 2: The central part is almost wholly uninhabited, and covered with primitive forests, which are visited only by hunters and lumberers.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: There was not a taxi to be had, or a light to be seen except for the stab of searchlights and the flashes of anti-aircraft batteries.##newline##Sentence 2: Wit implies hatred or contempt of folly and crime, produces its effects by brisk shocks of surprise, uses the whip of scorpions and the branding-iron, stabs, stings, pinches, tortures, goads, teases, corrodes, undermines; Humor implies a sure conception of the beautiful, the majestic,##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Or he was a piece of string, a rag, a willow-wand, and I had a contemptuous pity.##newline##Sentence 2: As soon as the coal was aboard, Pappy Tung and his deck coolies would go after the coal dust with hoses, scrubbers and rags, and in an hour or two the San Pablo would be as brass-gleaming white as ever.##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Both are young, both are pretty; but methinks the left hand lass is##newline##Sentence 2: She took a swig of the lassi, finding it cool and tingly, feeling instantly better.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: His jests, unlike some jests that we might name, Had nothing in them of a mouldy savor; But fresh, and apt, and tipped with point they came, To put grim Melancholy out of favor; To drive Imposture to his den of shame, To scourge Pretence, and make true Merit braver: So that you granted, after you had laughed, Though Wit had feathered, Truth had barbed the shaft.##newline##Sentence 2: You tip him and put the luggage in a taxi and drive a few blocks to your hotel.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The tree stands on a base of gray and black intertwined bars, referred to as a wreath in heraldic terms.##newline##Sentence 2: She gave out Three Musketeers bars at our class Halloween party.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Inasmuch as traits of consanguinity between different men may be discerned in their moral and intellectual resemblance, when their features and complexion would never betray the fact, so to discern the affinities of plants and animals, we must often go beneath the surface, // and find, in more important parts of their structure, marks of relationship of##newline##Sentence 2: trike down Jaws in the name of " lib'rty " or " property " generally when hey could be thought to bear, by ny stretch of the imagination, a raional relationship to a legitimate ocial end.##newline##Target: relationship_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Swamp gas, " she grumbled in disgust. "##newline##Sentence 2: the mere effect of mass, -- the force of gravity, -- gaseous molecules are attracted by solids and adhere to their surfaces; and when to this physical force is added the feeblest chemical affinity, the liquifiable gases can not retain their gaseous state.##newline##Target: gas_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: But when the alarm came of a Saxon landing on the south coast, and I asked to ride with his men, 42he would not take me. "##newline##Sentence 2: The agitations in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales have long been on the verge of bloody conflict, and a Land League has been formed in Germany at Berlin, of which Dr. A. Theodor Stamm is president, having for its object the transfer of land ownership from individuals to the State.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: , and coinmotion from within; to secure peace and prosperity at home, and importance and respect abroad; to settle on definite grounds those political maxims, which for ages unnumbered will regulate the intercourse of nations, whose infancy will soon grow into a powerful manhood; to concert all the plans, in short, which wisdom can devise, and union execute, for increasing the strength and prosperity of every branch of the confederacy; these are some of the points to be considered at the Congress of Panam * m.##newline##Sentence 2: EISENHOWER 'S POLITICAL RISE It was, in another maxim of the day, " time for a change, " and South Dakota's Sen. Karl Mundt had a simple formula for Republican victory: K, C2-Korea, communism, and corruption.##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: At once the plane became even more difficult to handle, and Close realised why he had left it so late. "##newline##Sentence 2: The Plane or Buttonwood tree, so common in our streets and environs, has hitherto##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: , like the rest of the building, were rendered, by their thickness, bullet proof -- so that when closed and bolted, the house was capable of withstanding an ordinary attack of the Indians.##newline##Sentence 2: The dreadful attack upon Crystal Knox had been the more dramatic aspect of it; but the fact that, even after that warning, Ted had actually been about to let himself be dragged into the vortex of the so-called " Peace Party " movement was, in Ceil's mind, far more fundamental and frightening##newline##Target: attack_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: My children -- " the gray eye of the aged man, glancing far through the cavern, whose expansive roof glowed redly with the torch-light, beheld the bowed heads of four thousand men and women.##newline##Sentence 2: She'd given him that mark, slammed a jug of whisky over his head.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The parted mouth of Tashtego revealed his shark-white teeth, which strangely gleamed as if they too had been tipped by corpusants; while lit up by the preternatural light,##newline##Sentence 2: Event stylist Colin Cowie shares smart meal-planning tips: For an easy-to-make egg dish, toast sliced bread.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: who was only thirty-four; and Miss Ellen whispered back, in reply: -- " She hasn't the slightest bit of shame! "##newline##Sentence 2: I got a little bit of good news. "##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: At such banquets, my body methought did not weigh an ounce.##newline##Sentence 2: With the last ounce of his strength, and with a BELLOW of RAGE, his arm muscles bulging, he crushes down on the handle.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: He may get trees in Oregon without crossing the // continent; but if he goes thither any time within a dozen years to come, in the expectation of loading with grain, we fear that his##newline##Sentence 2: A country such as India exports tea and iron ore but imports oil, food grains, copper, tin, lead and zinc and so on.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: So I tipped all the men off the board.##newline##Sentence 2: This process through the past, our author traces tip to the point where, with a redundant population.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: How impotent it must have confessed their aid to be, who had no better props and buttresses to construct than these.##newline##Sentence 2: At the auction of 46 years ' and a rumored $1,600,000 worth of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer props and costumes, Debbie Reynolds tried to buy her own brass bed from The Unsinkable Molly Brown, but just didn't want to go as high as $3,000.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The morning rose that ushered in the potato digging-day, in which numerous throngs of lads and lasses dressed in their best attire, with light and merry hearts came from all parts of the adjacent country, into the town of Larne; the lads to march to the work of charity and benevolence, the lasses to witness the procession, and reward their lovers as they passed them with their smiles.##newline##Sentence 2: It was warm in the greenhouse, and his companion, Annie, a buxom country lass, had prevailed upon the good constable to bring a picnic hamper. "##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: 1 pound pizza dough * 4 ounces Brie cheese, diced into 1/2-inch or smaller cubes 1/3 cup chopped walnuts 2 to 3 tablespoons honey Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.##newline##Sentence 2: Have ready a puff-paste made of five ounces of sifted flour, and a quarter of a pound of fresh butter.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: It's smashing work, but it won't do for you, Spooney; you're little, black-muzzled, queer in the legs, and have got a cold; nature and sleeping with the windows open have done wonders in making you fit for the hintellectuals, and you shall tip ' em the sentimental in Hamlet. "##newline##Sentence 2: And in fact, in that position, shafts tipped in air, he somewhat resembled an unharnessed cart or##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: weakened my understanding -- grief had nothing to do with changing my opinions -- it only drove me into an examination; by taking from me the props and supports of the outward world, it threw me upon myself, and taught me the tremendous truth, that there existed there nothing but darkness and chaos -- not a place to rest on -- not one subject which I could bear to reflect on in the long and terrible hours of the wakeful nights.##newline##Sentence 2: At the auction of 46 years ' and a rumored $1,600,000 worth of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer props and costumes, Debbie Reynolds tried to buy her own brass bed from The Unsinkable Molly Brown, but just didn't want to go as high as $3,000.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: a football fan, for lack of a better word, so it was always a kick for me to play in that game, knowing I'd be part of history.##newline##Sentence 2: /q/ " Few and short were the prayers we said, " And we spoke not a word of sorrow; " But we stedfastly gazed on the face of the dead, " And we bitterly thought of the moiTow. "##newline##Target: word_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Bowden has used that extra money to sign a slew of low-cost players in hopes of boosting the franchise's depth.##newline##Sentence 2: The player lays hold of this dub with both hands, raises it over his head, and as it descends strikes the ball.##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: I may be allowed, however, to say that the cotton gin has been of more profit to the United States, than ten times all they ever received by internal taxation; that our grain mill##newline##Sentence 2: * SEEK OUT THE BRIGHT-YELLOW WHOLE GRAIN COUNCIL STAMP It was launched by the WGC in 2005 and states exactly how many grams of whole grains are contained in a serving of the product.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: falling on an inclined plane, placed like a roof beneath, and running into casks below.##newline##Sentence 2: Foursome in a pool In Los Angeles County a telephone company executive formed a " plane pool " that flies four men from Claremont ' - to Santa Monica every day.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Toward the west, the lane descending, a hill was lost in the mazes of the woods.##newline##Sentence 2: Curvier lanes sound like more of a hazard, especially for speeders who don't slow down just because the road curves.##newline##Target: lane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Still the worst of his present attack was passed, and it was only what the physicians facetiously call the " tail of the gout " that gave him any inconveniences.##newline##Sentence 2: In 1835, when Ben Milam ordered an attack on San Antonio, one group refused to obey the order until Arnold could return from a scouting trip to lead them.##newline##Target: attack_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Thus fix'd, a dreadful hour I past, And now I heard, as from a blast, A voice pronounce my name: Nor long upon my ear it dwelt, When round me ' gan the air to melt, And motion once again I felt Quick circling o'er my frame.##newline##Sentence 2: More Gothas were circling above and below, propellers churning through the murk, their familiar Wong-wong filling the fog.##newline##Target: circle_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: On the first page of the book was pinned the billet that had accompanied Somerville's rose.##newline##Sentence 2: she looked at the watch pinned to her blouse? "##newline##Target: pin_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: And instead of laying so much stress on opinion, as if this were the only matter of unity, how much better would it be to remember the maxim acted upon of old, by different parties in the Church, that " Catholics, as Catholics, agree always in matters of faith, and good Catholics never break charity, but the best Catholics, as men, may vary in their opinions##newline##Sentence 2: This Freud also took seriously, and he pronounced the idea in an italicized maxim in one of his earliest papers: " Hysterical patients suffer principally##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Mr. Brown then was nominated as cook; but as he insisted that he could cook " never a bit of a male but only roast potatoes, " and we had unluckily no potatoes stored, the important office was after due deliberation bestowed on the chairman himself.##newline##Sentence 2: Mama only ate a little bit of the breast and some of the gravy.##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: By some accident, Big Elk became separated from his hunting companions, late in the afternoon of a winter's day.##newline##Sentence 2: lust jumped out of it, out of my seat, out of my job (for the afternoon).##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Europe, hunted out of Europe, and cast away upon the shores of America, set up a new war of persecution here -- even here -- in the untrodden -- almost unapproachable domain of the Great Spirit of the Universe; pursued their brethren to death, scourged, fined, imprisoned, banished, mutilated, and where nothing else would do, hung up their bodies between heaven and earth for the good of their souls; drove mother after mother, and babe after babe, into the woods for not believing as their church taught; made war upon the lords of the soil, the savages who had been their stay and support while they were strangers, and sick and poor, and ready to perish, and whom it was therefore a duty for them -- after they had recovered their strength -- to make happy with the edge of the sword; such war as the savages would make upon the wild beast-way-laying them by night, and shooting them to death, as they lie asleep with their young,##newline##Sentence 2: Then, between the years 185o and 188o, explorers like Speke, Livingstone, and Stanley braved the terrors of the unknown, torrid heat, terrible diseases, wild beasts, and savages; discovered the sources of the Nile; and made adventurous voyages up the Congo and Zambesi rivers.##newline##Target: savage_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: From there, make changes to prefab comics by adding dialogue, props and characters, or create whole minidramas from scratch.##newline##Sentence 2: It had become a mighty power in the world, inseparably connected with the education and the religion of the age, the prime mover of all political affairs, the grand prop of absolute monarchies, the last hope of the papal hierarchy.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: They had spent their last grain of hope on the direction of life; hence they turned in the other.##newline##Sentence 2: Carcass grades indicate cattle receiving 75 percent grain graded much higher than those receiving only 50 percent grain.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The first thing that attracted their attention was the sound of a bell, which struck four strokes very distinctly, and in a very peculiar manner, near where the helmsman stood in steering the ship.##newline##Sentence 2: He stroked Yves ' forehead, stroked his hair. "##newline##Target: stroke_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The luckless Orson gained nothing by his stratagem, but a useless thump of his own hairy carcass against the tree, the force of which brought him again upon the ground.##newline##Sentence 2: 10: 40-10: 45 p.m.: While talking on the phone, Kaelin hears three thumps on the wall.##newline##Target: thump_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Among its first official acts was the appointment of a committee to probe graft.##newline##Sentence 2: In all cases success is more certain, when the wax is closely pressed so as to fit closely to every part, and leave no interstices; and it is indispensible that every por tion of the wound on the stock and graft be totally excluded from the external air.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Harry, have you the address of the gentleman who was the chairman of your committee yesterday?##newline##Sentence 2: Photograph Stephen Case, chairman and CEO of AOL, and Toni Faye, senior consultant to Time Warner Inc. and member of the CBC Foundation Board of Directors, demonstrate their support of the Congressional Black Caucus.##newline##Target: chairman_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: It was towards the middle of the afternoon, as she was so reclining, -- her Bible half open, her little transparent fingers lying listlessly between the leaves, -- suddenly she heard her mother's voice, in sharp tones, in the verandah. "##newline##Sentence 2: lust jumped out of it, out of my seat, out of my job (for the afternoon).##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Morning found them in a rich country with rows of stately 1 trees along the banks.##newline##Sentence 2: In the first case, suppose it is desired to form a group of trees,##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Under this denomination we are not to include all the laws given to the people of Israel.##newline##Sentence 2: When the European Union officially invited candidate countries to apply for accession, the first tranche of fast-track applicants included Poland, Estonia, Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovenia.##newline##Target: include_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: But courage, old lass, I hope to see thee soon within a biscuit's toss of the merry land, riding snugly at anchor in some green cove, and sheltered from the boisterous winds.##newline##Sentence 2: She took a swig of the lassi, finding it cool and tingly, feeling instantly better.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: And, in truth, although there were five hundred at the smallest computation in full view, within a couple of miles, on the open champaign, there was no real risk in what he did.##newline##Sentence 2: For the risk intolerant, the stress of not knowing what may happen drains the potential delight from any forthcoming event.##newline##Target: risk_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Another group of children had gathered at the head of a narrowalley on the far side of the street.##newline##Sentence 2: Descending the hall, the procession passed under an elegant arch, and another at the head of Market-street, where his friends left the carriage, and the General alone proceeded down the military line, in presence of thousands of both sexes.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Barbarians ' were allowed to build warehouses andTAI-PAN (72) BOOK Ifactories on a plot of land half a mile by two hundred yards at Canton; ' barbarians ' were totally confined to this walled-in area -- the Canton Settlement -- andcould stay only for the winter shipping season -- September until March -- when they must leave and go to Macao.##newline##Sentence 2: The agitations in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales have long been on the verge of bloody conflict, and a Land League has been formed in Germany at Berlin, of which Dr. A. Theodor Stamm is president, having for its object the transfer of land ownership from individuals to the State.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: And she measured his and others ' achievements by this maxim.##newline##Sentence 2: The several states are not even mentioned by name in any part, as if it was intended to impress the maxim on America, that our freedom and independence arose from our union, and that without it we could never be free or independent.##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Even as he directs the fire, the flanks of his horse are torn in bloody fragments by a cannon ball -- they fall to the earth, the horse, writhing over his prostrate master.##newline##Sentence 2: Covered with metallic balls for discharging electrical energy, the monstrous contraption seemed fit for a horror##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: -- the assault irresistible, -- " how would you like to go it in uncle Billy Shakspeare, and tip the natives the last hagony in the tragics? "##newline##Sentence 2: INSERT CUT: Young bruce on Thomas's shoulders- thomas TIPS back, threatening to drop Young bruce who LAUGHS and LAUGHS.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Practically, we know that nine tenths either goes to the mint as soon as it is washed out of the earth, or is cast into stamped bars which perform all the purposes of coin.##newline##Sentence 2: And until today, the bar association had not suggested which option##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: In the evening, having supped, we went to the theatre, where I revenged myself upon the " heavy man, " and the " light comedian, " who had in the afternoon made merry at my expense for carrying the harp, by getting up a hiss for the former gentleman, who knew not one single word of his part, and by hitting the latter individual upon the nose with an apple, for which latter feat (as the actor was a great favorite,) I was hounded out of the theatre, and narrowly escaped being carried to the watch-house.##newline##Sentence 2: Rememberinghis exhaustion that afternoon, he thought he'd drop off to sleep quickly.##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: (Her mummified head-the wax prop, actually-qualifies as the most gruesome object in the exhibition.)##newline##Sentence 2: Amidst universal desertion, RUTH has not forsaken her; but is become her joy in sorrow, her companion in solitude, her prop in decrepit age!##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: I said, " Hotdamn that's a good flea market y'all got yourselves down the road, " because from the looks on the six or eight guys in the bar I knew that they sold their wares there between the pine trees of the jockey lot.##newline##Sentence 2: Such, my dear sir, are our sentiments on the subject of emancipation; and, although we can not admit of one word of argument in favor of a system which violates the laws of God, and the natural rights of man-which makes him, who was born our equal, live our slave; still, our abhorrence of the system is qualified by a consideration of the peculiar circumstances of the case: we recognize that first law of nature, which enjoins self-preservation, at any hazard; and we should as soon think of enjoining upon the keeper of a caravan, to break the bars of his cages, and unchain his tigers, as to bid the planters restore the blacks to liberty at once.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Uncle Horace reaped the waving grain, proud man as he was, with secret tears falling upon the sheaves.##newline##Sentence 2: The grass-fed claim on a label is not independently verified, however, and producers may " finish " the cattle on grain (usually without the hormone and drug additives).##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: His limbs trembled in every joint and rivet, and his teeth, which were not metallic, shook like a set of props.##newline##Sentence 2: As Maczko continued the paintings in " The Bedroom Series, " her sets and props became more detailed.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Willoughby's as the family possess and will submit for examination, carefully searched, in the hope that some record may be found in his hand-writing, sufficiently clear to establish the fact that my mother was the wife of the elder Captain Allen.##newline##Sentence 2: The record labels ' new services include MusicNet, backed by AOL Time Warner, BMG, and EMI; and PressPlay backed by Sony Music and Vivendi Universal.##newline##Target: record_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: If the bulk of the 20th century was defined by American military might, its last decade may be summed up by this maxim: " We are all Americans now, like it or not. "##newline##Sentence 2: The maxim is grounded not only on the most essential principles of good government, but on those of the successful conduct of business of any description.##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: That in Scotland, for instance, contains about a hundred subjects, but who, with their families included, amount to two hundred and fifty souls, all supported from the labors of the blind, conjointly with the funds of the Institution.##newline##Sentence 2: Gutman quotes a slave ship captain whose diary in 1682, includes this pas-sage:...##newline##Target: include_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She gave out Three Musketeers bars at our class Halloween party.##newline##Sentence 2: Nor was this all: his nephew was at the time preparing for the bar, and soon after the above circumstance occurred his certificates were presented, and refused, with this declaration, " that no man of the name and family of F. should be admitted. "##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The Captain saw that he was running a great risk in standing on, for if he was brought to his vessel might be seized for infringing the blockade; as he knew the Brazilians would advance any pretext for the purpose of getting possession of his vessel and cargo.##newline##Sentence 2: Only a man or woman in love with God can be a fool without risk. "##newline##Target: risk_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Therefore we have a multitude of issues to work out. "##newline##Sentence 2: The clergy of Bos * ton and the vicinity, the members of the church and congregation of which the deceased had been pastor, and a multitude of other acquaintances and friends, united with the bereaved family and relations in deploring their common loss, while they praised God for the bright example of Christian virtue which /z/ they had witnessed.##newline##Target: multitude_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: And instead of laying so much stress on opinion, as if this were the only matter of unity, how much better would it be to remember the maxim acted upon of old, by different parties in the Church, that " Catholics, as Catholics, agree always in matters of faith, and good Catholics never break charity, but the best Catholics, as men, may vary in their opinions##newline##Sentence 2: Hard ard cases make bad law " is a sound legal maxim.##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: i. p.136), a horse consumes 79 1/10 ounces of carbon in twenty-four hours, a milch cow 70 3/4 ounces; so that the horse requires 13 pounds 3 1/2 ounces, and the cow 11 pounds 10 3/4 ounces of oxygen##newline##Sentence 2: one ounce of Cheddar cheese furnishes about the same amount of calcium as do six ounces of milk.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Thus -- thus the ravisher went forth; Like meteors o'er the cloudy north: Thus -- thus the desperate boy went down, In splendour o'er the mountain's brown: His vestment streaming far behind, And glittering in the rushing wind: His dancing plumage tipped with light, Like eaglets in their loftiest flight -- As now he darted on the sight, And met the sun's last rays: -- Now hidden in the forest shade -- Emerging now -- and now betrayed By plumes that in the sunset played; And robe that seemed to blaze!##newline##Sentence 2: LET THEM EAT CO2 THE NATURE OF TIPPING POINTS is that they happen dizzyingly fast.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: HL Tauri has water-ice grains in its disk, which are perhaps similar in nature to our cometary matter.##newline##Sentence 2: Having few medicines, he resorted to tobacco, and found six grains of snuff as effectual in exciting vomiting, as two of Tartar emetic.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The Cupid of the ancient Hindoos tipped his arrows with flowers, and orange buds are the bridal crown with us, a nation of yesterday.##newline##Sentence 2: You tip him and put the luggage in a taxi and drive a few blocks to your hotel.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Pray, Miss Benoir, may I be allowed to ask if those drops are for the ball, tomorrow night?##newline##Sentence 2: Dowis, who hails from Ty Cobb's hometown of Royston, Ga., is quick-footed and quick-witted, able to flip the ball to a trailing halfback at the last split second.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: In the evening, having supped, we went to the theatre, where I revenged myself upon the " heavy man, " and the " light comedian, " who had in the afternoon made merry at my expense for carrying the harp, by getting up a hiss for the former gentleman, who knew not one single word of his part, and by hitting the latter individual upon the nose with an apple, for which latter feat (as the actor was a great favorite,) I was hounded out of the theatre, and narrowly escaped being carried to the watch-house.##newline##Sentence 2: A Fairfax doctor and his wife, who were robbed of their Nissan Maxima at Tysons in 1989, said they were parking their car in Terrace B near Bloomingdale's in the early afternoon when a man with a gun demanded their car. "##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: You sit in the bar all ready to tell your best stories and you forget half of them.##newline##Sentence 2: Practically, we know that nine tenths either goes to the mint as soon as it is washed out of the earth, or is cast into stamped bars which perform all the purposes of coin.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The author has evidently studied the history and spirit of the period diligently; and he has imbodied them in a tale of fiction with such success, as to produce an historical novel of a high order of excellence.##newline##Sentence 2: Martha Stewart awaits sentencing for lying to investigators; 28 top federal employees hold fake degrees; journalists at USA Today, The New York Times, and The Nation have presented fiction as fact.##newline##Target: fiction_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: There's a bedstead in it covered with a patched quilt, made of as many colors as " Joseph's coat, " and an old-fashioned bureau with great claw feet, and a chair whose cushion is stuffed with cotton batting; a wash-stand, a table, and a looking-glass over it.##newline##Sentence 2: I 'm covered with a quilt the likes of which I've never seen.##newline##Target: quilt_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: She is now, as we judge, a singer and player of the first order, and has many pupils in town##newline##Sentence 2: We specified a Sedona EX, the better-equipped model of the line, with the optional equipment that most Sedona buyers will choose: power sliding side doors and rear hatch, as well as the rear-seat, headliner-mounted DVD player with two headphones-an essential##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Its nobility includes, we believe, from thirty to forty ancient members of the Empire, who, on the score of their great landed property, and the place they hold in public opinion, are well qualified to be the component parts of a House of Peers.##newline##Sentence 2: In addition, the hurricane destroyed Alabama's pecan crop and knocked out electric power in the southwest part of the state for at least a week.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: wants, indeed, Mrs. Haller may have relieved; but whether she has, or could have given as much as would purchase liberty for the son, the prop of his age -- Stra.##newline##Sentence 2: Huge, over-the-top props are a favored part of creating the right image.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Among the whites he came and went as he chose, and also among the savages, who respected him as a " great medicine " and prophet -- to injure whom would be to offend the Great Spirit.##newline##Sentence 2: p 198 " I don't like bein ' trussed up like a turkey, " said Lem, " a-waitin ' for one of them savages to slit our gullets. "##newline##Target: savage_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: said the old lady, " every bit and grain of my comfort ' s gone, " and removing her spectacles she continued silently rubbing them with her apron##newline##Sentence 2: Also, building up of a Soviet grain reserve might discourage sudden and inflationary purchases when Russian crops fail.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: if I ask if the relationship was sacredly regarded by you? "##newline##Sentence 2: Although he has considerably oversimplified this relationship, the example that a President sets does matter and his personal ethics are a legitimate campaign topic.##newline##Target: relationship_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: In the neighboring building, we saw it standing in rows, with the lower part of the cone in a hole, to drop the molasses again upon an inclined plane, which conveys it to a vat holding thirty thousand gallons.##newline##Sentence 2: Foursome in a pool In Los Angeles County a telephone company executive formed a " plane pool " that flies four men from Claremont ' - to Santa Monica every day.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: like my friends before, I'd strive till life-blood is no more; Like them, I think the only path Of safety from the ruffian's wrath, Is sword to sword, and man to man, To drive these villains from our land.##newline##Sentence 2: From out of the north, as the winds of spring blew across the land, there came the one called Rild.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Several rods, or shoots of that thus oddly consecrated tree, were accordingly selected, cut and carefully trimmed for the purpose.##newline##Sentence 2: trees of any sort, particularly during a storm.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Lucia could as yet only sob and utter inarticulate expressions of thanks: but she soon raised her head, and looked at Ellie with her sad smile,##newline##Sentence 2: Witnesses told of seeing severed limbs and a body with its head blown off.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: I did not like parts of it much, but other portions were really splendid.##newline##Sentence 2: Its nobility includes, we believe, from thirty to forty ancient members of the Empire, who, on the score of their great landed property, and the place they hold in public opinion, are well qualified to be the component parts of a House of Peers.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: He lands among us, falls into some circle, good or bad, as the case may be, hears them speak in strong terms of their party adversaries, is able to make none of that secret##newline##Sentence 2: When the feathers land, some piles will be bigger than others. "##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Van Andel, 58, and DeVos, 56, are chairman and president of Amway, a large direct-selling organization that claims $1.5 billion in annual sales and at least 1 million distributors, mostly part-timers, who peddle the company's diverse line of products, from laundry detergents to health food.##newline##Sentence 2: As soon as the resolution is adopted, and so announced, the Chairman, if no other business immediately offers, should say, " There is no business before the meeting. "##newline##Target: chairman_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: They had stolen two days ' march upon the English army, before the Duke of Cumberland knew any thing of their movements: but when it was ascertained that they had aclually commenced their retreat, his courage and that of his army began to rise; it seemed to be the first time they had breathed freely for six weeks, during which a small and ill appointed force had carried the standard of Glenfinnin a hundred and fifty miles into the heart of England, in the face of a hostile people, and of an army which immeasurably exceeded theirs in discipline and numbers.##newline##Sentence 2: In the face of such statistics, researchers are exploring which children seem to survive -- even thrive -- after a divorce.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: encouraged to it by his friend Drummond, a Scotchman, and one of the gold discoverers, who, clapping him on the shoulder, said, " Odds, mon, if you are set upon this, there is my large canvass bag, which will hold two or three bushels; take that, and my Malabar boy * ith you for a guide; he knows the place where we found these curious ores, and you can return with a back load of gold. "##newline##Sentence 2: Husband Philip, advertising promotion man for the Lima (Ohio) Citizen, was taking a nap when Barbara felt the bag of waters break.##newline##Target: bag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: I will meet thee, but it must be at the bar of thy Maker.##newline##Sentence 2: I said, " Hotdamn that's a good flea market y'all got yourselves down the road, " because from the looks on the six or eight guys in the bar I knew that they sold their wares there between the pine trees of the jockey lot.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The smoke curled upward from the chimneys of the suburban districts, and little rustic girls and boys were seen in all directions, hurrying homeward with their arms full of shavings -- old women, too, with their bags of rags, betook themselves somewhere -- Heaven only knows whether they had any homes, or where they went -- at any rate, with backs bent under their awful burdens, they turned into lanes and alleys, and disappeared.##newline##Sentence 2: Carters jostle peddlers, and servants swarm the lane between shop windows and the row of posts protecting them from the street.##newline##Target: lane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Mr. Millinet reached New York in safety, and solaced himself for his defeat in New England by attention to his pretty person, and his pretty customers, balls, assemblies, and billiards; in process of time made a fashionable failure, a fashionable marriage, and commenced business afresh.##newline##Sentence 2: " Cut my balls off, I suppose. "##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Still, with that sternly compressed lip and eagle eye, he watched the effect of each discharge, nor hesitated, when he saw glimpses of the clear sky, through the lanes which he made in the Mexican ranks.##newline##Sentence 2: If you don't want to be spending Christmas Day in the breakdown lane of I-76 somewhere between Bedford and Carlisle, I'd leave early or not at all, " the FM-104 jock advised his listening audience (a * * 28; 11081; TOOLONG up.##newline##Target: lane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: One little incident in our afternoon travel I will mention, as it appeared to afford more pleasure to the rest of the passengers than it did to me.##newline##Sentence 2: The notorious penchant of some women for want- | ing to see every last thing that is available before making a decision can ruin more than one afternoon.##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Let him exchange weapons with the savage, and he will still obtain the victory. "##newline##Sentence 2: their blind ignorance they insisted that an attempt at time translation would consume so much energy that we would be left defenseless against the besieging savages outside our walls. "##newline##Target: savage_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Rudge and Dennis enter from the back of the plane.##newline##Sentence 2: We observed (161) that if df, representing the weight of W, be resolved into the two forces f e perpendicular to the beam and d e in the direction of it, d e will represent the force exerted by W in the direction of the beam, d e therefore will represent the force with which a spherical weight W will move down the plane.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: There, once in a while, was seen the thin, care-worn, melancholy visage of an old tory, with a Wig that, in times long past, had perhaps figured at a Province House ball.##newline##Sentence 2: Working out with manager Leo Durocher in spring training, he fired a double-play ball to Leo, playing second, and broke his right thumb.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: behind a tree, the lever off and counting before the first barrage ripped into it.##newline##Sentence 2: The boy objected that his father was near, but he was at length prevailed on to go, and after they had fired the tree, and while they were busy killing or taking the squirrels, the hunter suddenly made his appearance, and clasped the strange boy in his arms.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Shaw spent five decades writing big movies and novels (The Young Lions, Lucy Crown) and unprofitable short fiction, because " in a novel or a play you must be a whole man.##newline##Sentence 2: The Peruvian annals may be deemed to show somewhat of the effects of this union, since there is a tinge of the marvellous spread over them down to the very latest period, which, like a mist before the reader's eye, makes it difficult to distinguish between fact and fiction.##newline##Target: fiction_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: To his great surprise, therefore, a few minutes afterwards, he heard a thumping sound, and, on turning over to see what the cause of it was, he found that the little door was loose again, and was swinging backward and forward as before.##newline##Sentence 2: Susan took the water bottle in her lap to stop the irritating thumping, then looked out the windshield, away from Albert. "##newline##Target: thump_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: devious interferences was now shared, debonairly lit a KocMoc cigarette, that went ill with his rags and his paint.##newline##Sentence 2: I see the dirt and rags; I see the wrinkles and elf-locks, the wild eye and the shrivelled limbs; I hear the hoarse and broken tones of age and passion, the convulsive laughter and the##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: When a Washington, D.C., woman complained in the mid-1970s of retaliation by a supervisor after she refused to take part in an " after-hours affair, " a federal judge ruled that the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which bars sex discrimination, did not apply.##newline##Sentence 2: After passing the Nebraska, the party halted for part of two days on the bank of the river, a little above Papillion Creek, to supply themselves with a stock of oars and poles from the tough wood of the ash, which is not met with higher up the Missouri.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: that can not be; For though by fate we're forced to part, Thou ne'er canst absent be to me, -- Thou ' rt ever present in my heart!##newline##Sentence 2: Building jewels in unexpected parts of London is the 37-year-old Ghanaian architect's stock in trade, making him one of the city's hottest stars in the field. "##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: WHEN YUSUF and his borrowed donkey returned home, footsore and hungry after five##newline##Sentence 2: She was, of course, the child of poor parents, of whom the donkey was the chief support.##newline##Target: donkey_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The good woman held up her purse -- a little linen bag tied at one end with a tow string, and pretty well distended at the other -- to assure the frugal husband she had not lost it in climbing into the wagon; and having deposited it for safe keeping where old ladies sometimes stow away thread##newline##Sentence 2: Separated from the rest of the cleaning articles and trash bag, we SEE a bag full of Dianne's discards -- a long skirt, boots, scarf and poncho.##newline##Target: bag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Now, boys, " cried Black George, in a stentorian voice, " every man pick a nigger, and give the -- skunks h --! "##newline##Sentence 2: George Clooney's conventional direction of his script for Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, the painfully shy Kaufman (who until last month's appearance on The Charlie Rose Show didn't show his face in the media) is going to write a new script, pick his own actors and ask a studio to let him direct it. "##newline##Target: pick_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: There's a bedstead in it covered with a patched quilt, made of as many colors as " Joseph's coat, " and an old-fashioned bureau with great claw feet, and a chair whose cushion is stuffed with cotton batting; a wash-stand, a table, and a looking-glass over it.##newline##Sentence 2: PAGE 74: White cotton blankets and floral quilt: Laura Fisher/Antique Quilts &; Americana.##newline##Target: quilt_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: It was as black, as thick of lip, as white of eye, as long of heel, as thick of skull, as its genuine Afric forebears; which proved to me that the African loses none of his primal characteristics by change of climate and circumstances, nor by the progress of generations.##newline##Sentence 2: Their Committee on Media Integrity (Comint) is off to a promising start in life, nipping at the heels of the Los Angeles public-TV giant KCET.##newline##Target: heel_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: enough give to take the edge off bumps while not actually absorbing them like a longer-travel bike would. "##newline##Sentence 2: In about four hours we saw, crossing the valley and stopping on the edge of the desert, a single Arab.##newline##Target: edge_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The poets of Rome sang her praises; the name of Athens was ever in the mouths of Horace and Virgil; and Cicero followed the crowd to learn the lessons of wisdom and taste, in the birth-place of genius, and among the chef d'euvres of art.##newline##Sentence 2: The chef makes " noodles " out of long chewy strips of cuttlefish and mounds them in the center of a burnished origami-like bowl with a julienne of daikon, burdock root stained orange to look like carrots, precise rounds of sliced okra, orange salmon eggs and sea urchin.##newline##Target: chef_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: And, believe me, sir, for I say it more in pity than anger, he is a man much given to appropriating to himself the coats and breeches of his friends, and going uninvited to balls. "##newline##Sentence 2: UP THE BURN: stand on a Bosu ball as you chop.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: // These montages are brief but mesmerizing, and the film also includes discussion of Western influences on Japanese film makers, with excited references to Griffith ' s " Broken Blossoms " and Chaplin ' s " Woman of Paris. "##newline##Sentence 2: If the Mosaic account include the fossil species, it does not the existing ones; and if it embrace the latter, it can not the former.##newline##Target: include_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: No, Judge, not exactly, " replied Bradshaw, smiling; " but I would have honours easy, a fair deal, honest players, and then go a-head for the odd trick, which should not be won by trickery. "##newline##Sentence 2: With no time to question, he hurries to reprogram the CD player.##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: is it reasonable to ask us to march to battle with the sign of Rome flaunting over our heads?##newline##Sentence 2: A strange and stirring sight, to come on a pool at night, after a little rain, and see the toads and frogs clinging to the edges their temporary pond, bodies immersed in the water but heads in the air, all of them croaking away in tricky counterpoint.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Charisma is pure fiction, and so is brilliance.##newline##Sentence 2: It occurs in fact and in fiction, and in either case it is of a high species.##newline##Target: fiction_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: PAGE The Land-Fever 1 Ball at Thram's Huddle 15 A Forest Fete 27 Love vs.##newline##Sentence 2: He is short and powerfully built with his hair greased straight back, dark glasses, black suit and shoes, starched white shirt with a high collar, gold cuff links which he's constantly snapping and adjusting, a ball point pen which he clicks continuously.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: and a thin nose, and a twist of her dyed brown hair straggled down her forehead.##newline##Sentence 2: Then the immense power of muscle is displayed in the concentrated energy of the spring; he flies through the air and settles on the throat, usually throwing his own body over the animal, while his teeth and claws are fixed on the neck; this is the manner in which the spine of an animal is broken -- by a sudden twist, and not by a blow.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Yet judge not harshly of mankind for this, It in the end gives justly; but Fame's crown Can ill requite a life of cankering care; Can ill requite the assassin's bloody stab; Or a long##newline##Sentence 2: As if in recoil from this stab, she angrily turned, my pillar of cloth, and it was alarming, how closely her back resembled her front.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: That gives them quite an edge, you know.##newline##Sentence 2: When within fifty yards of this cavern, on looking up, he found himself under the drop from the edges above. '##newline##Target: edge_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Views and Reviews in American History, Literature, &; Fiction, by W. G. Simms.##newline##Sentence 2: Fiction eight: The decision last year to cut off aid to Pakistan, Afghanistan'sneighbor, was justifiable as a measure to prevent Pakistan from developing a nuclear weapon.##newline##Target: fiction_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Bridget My answer, dearest, would betray my promise to my mother, and, perhaps, bring wo, nay death upon our head.##newline##Sentence 2: On the bed was Joel Converse, his eyes wide and glasslike, saliva oozing from the sides of his mouth, his head moving back and forth as if in a trance, unintelligible sounds emerging from his lips.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Got to drop down to ' em on a hemp twist ladder far as it takes.##newline##Sentence 2: He who could give to a text the most fanciful twist, the most recondite allusion, was esteemed the ablest divine.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The morning rose that ushered in the potato digging-day, in which numerous throngs of lads and lasses dressed in their best attire, with light and merry hearts came from all parts of the adjacent country, into the town of Larne; the lads to march to the work of charity and benevolence, the lasses to witness the procession, and reward their lovers as they passed them with their smiles.##newline##Sentence 2: " I would far rather she remain a common lass than be raised to the nobility and be miserable all her life! "##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: By some accident, Big Elk became separated from his hunting companions, late in the afternoon of a winter's day.##newline##Sentence 2: " How ' bout tomorrow afternoon at two? "##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: It was a Soviet agent who tipped us oil about Yates. "##newline##Sentence 2: In his right hand he wielded, with an air of mighty importance, a slender black rod tipped with silver, from which hung at one end a small slip of black crape, and a. narrow leather thong was tied to the other end-symbolical, it was thought, of the summary course of justice in Corea.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: So saying, and taking the arm of our hero, bewildered at what he saw and heard, he led him aside, with little David wiping his eyes, and still unable to speak for his emotion, following them close at their heels.##newline##Sentence 2: In the space between the groups with their flags, a SPANISH SOLDIER of lithe and whiplash form is doing a flamenco dance, his heels smacking the ground in rhythmic plops.##newline##Target: heel_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The Captain saw that he was running a great risk in standing on, for if he was brought to his vessel might be seized for infringing the blockade; as he knew the Brazilians would advance any pretext for the purpose of getting possession of his vessel and cargo.##newline##Sentence 2: let's not take even the remotest of risks. "##newline##Target: risk_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: But still it was " the Old Guard, " which had ever regarded itself the prop and pride of Bonaparte.##newline##Sentence 2: The two-stroke Mercury 50 we tested is competitively priced in its range, listing at $5,631 (including a one-year mechanical and three-year corrosion warranty, though the prop, instruments, and fuel tank are extra).##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Simultaneously, local operatives in the Southeast China port of Swatow, the city near the planned landing, made hundreds of area photographs and closely monitored local Chinese security forces.##newline##Sentence 2: The day previous to our landing was a Sunday, and I was pleased to observe the decorum which pervaded the ship.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Go draw the cork, tip the decanter; but, when your great toe shall set you a-roaring, it will be no affair of mine.##newline##Sentence 2: The b'hoys had a " rolling gait " and " surly manner, " wrote one historian, adding that they usually wore a " shiny stovepipe hat tipped over the forehead, soap-locks plastered flat.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: None of her fears or dangers disturbed his repose, and when the morning light allowed her to gaze on his sweet face, tears of joy and thankfulness flowed fast down her cheeks, that she had been enabled thus to shield that dear, innocent one from the savages##newline##Sentence 2: But isn't it offensive to have the leading church figure in an area as big as this with a wife who was a short time ago a savage?##newline##Target: savage_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: " Had I been thine, " said Cortes, gravely, " thou wouldst have fulfilled thy word, and hanged me, wouldst thou not? "##newline##Sentence 2: SKRAM Shit is runnin backwards, G. KITCHIN Word?##newline##Target: word_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Before he could extricate himself, Inglehardt had disappeared from the scene -- from the field; for, believing everything lost -- ignorant of the rally of Marjoribanks as well as Coffin, and seeing the latter driven before the dragoons of Hampton, he obeyed only the counsels of his own fear, and led the remnant of his troop into the deep thickets, whence he made his way into the nearest swamp harborage.##newline##Sentence 2: The state police, who estimated the rally crowd at 10,00C to 12,000, and Justice Department officials.##newline##Target: rally_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: from each other with the crowding of their roots, and the feldspar begins to be picked out of the granite to find them food.##newline##Sentence 2: Picking up the telephone, he lectured for an hour through his luxuriant white beard to 500 rapt students at four Negro colleges in Louisiana and Mississippi.##newline##Target: pick_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Good people often seem laboring under a great mistake in regard to works of fiction.##newline##Sentence 2: Against the mobile background of the never completely formalised relations between the law of obscenity and the social policing of pornography, and of the migration of specialist pornography's themes and figures into the circuits of a more generally disseminated educative fiction in the guise of ethical techniques for (sexual) self-improvement, our plan is to review the English Obscene Publications Act of 1959 and the 1960 case in which the new statute was to have received its definitive construction, Regina v. Penguin Books Ltd., popularly known as the trial of Lady Chatterley's Lover.##newline##Target: fiction_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Among its first official acts was the appointment of a committee to probe graft.##newline##Sentence 2: 19 shows a stock cut off for cleft-grafting with the upright cleft separated by an iron or steel wedge, ready for the graft; fig.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Whene'er a perspicacity absurd, Spies something wrong in every look and word, Takes great offence, with no offence design'd, The fault that's found is in the finder's mind.##newline##Sentence 2: (ADAM PULLS OUT HIS NOTEBOOK AND HUNTS FOR THE WORD.##newline##Target: word_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Well, old gal -- here's to the wind that blows, the ship that goes, and the lass that loves a sailor! '##newline##Sentence 2: He considered himself one of the poor, but even the boy knew that this young man's parents had paid his education at the law -- whereas the rest, lad and lass alike, were in the mill or at the works or on the docks at twelve or fourteen.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: He never came near me all day, and toward night I began to dress for the ball.##newline##Sentence 2: On and on he went, playing as if he had taken lessons from Rube Goldberg-straying down an adjoining fairway on the eighth, bouncing his ball off a tree on the 15th, dumping his drive into loose sod on the 16th.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: They passed an island -- a narrow bar of sand with a few stray blades of grass scattered along its centre, as if to set off the baldness of the remaining portions, while a stunted poplar marked the spot where stood a small hut nearly dismantled by the tempests and the droughts of successive seasons.##newline##Sentence 2: United States District Court for the District of Columbia entered the Consent Decree proposed by the American Bar Association and the U.S. Department of Justice as the Final Judgment in the litigation between those parties.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Her thoughts became intoxicated with delight, while her soul seemed to be suddenly endowed with new being; and she experienced the most ecstatic enjoyment in the contemplation of one, the knowledge of whom had unfolded to her a new element##newline##Sentence 2: Where in short he can be by himself in quiet contemplation and suck spiritual nourishment from the liquid Communion in his hand and clarify his head.##newline##Target: contemplation_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: A fellow can't drive tandem without having his leader always out of sight ' round some twist or other in ' em.##newline##Sentence 2: Leave the assembly under weights for the glue to set if you have to correct a twist.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Truth be told, coaches look forward to that All-Star break, just like players do, " Popovich said. "##newline##Sentence 2: The player lays hold of this dub with both hands, raises it over his head, and as it descends strikes the ball.##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Why don't you ask him if he'll agree to a stipulation, if we do, that the Cape boy's testimony be made a part of the court record and that we spare the boy -- and ourselves -- another repetitionof that bloody story?##newline##Sentence 2: Of the impressions which they produced upon the artist's mind, we have only one partial record; and, although we can, perhaps, reconcile it with the course of his subsequent studies, and the acknowledged superiority which resulted from them, this record is hardly what we might have anticipated.##newline##Target: record_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: A Qantas spokesman said today that when the plane landed its fuel supply was ' fairly close to our operational requirement " for only 15 minutes more flight.##newline##Sentence 2: If the sun's rays be parallel to any plane, that plane to which they are parallel, is called a plane of shade.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: " By my sowl, sir, it wasn't one, but two of them I saw, skulking, like thieves from a Kilmainham twist, behind a hay-stack.##newline##Sentence 2: She looked over at him innocently, but he noticed a wry, proud twist at the corners of her mouth. "##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: In the afternoon, the commissary going out in search of the objects of his journey, grain and bullocks for the troops, L'Isle strolled out with the ladies to survey the curiosities of Evora, and Moodie followed closely Lady Mabel's steps. "##newline##Sentence 2: As a Persian grain trader says, " We are earning $24 billion a year from oil.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The mare gave a great snort and pushed her rump back at the same moment the donkey plunged downward.##newline##Sentence 2: Winding his doubtful and perilous way among tottering and ruined houses, jostled by camels, dromedaries, horses, and donkeys, perhaps he will draw up against a wall, and, thinking of plague, hold his breath and screw himself into nothing, while he allows a corpse to pass, followed by a long train of howling women, dressed in black, with masks over their faces; and entering##newline##Target: donkey_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: My mother also exercised a wise discretion in the selection of such books as she thought would afford me " maxims of guidance, " as she called it, through the world.##newline##Sentence 2: The wise dresser is he who appreciates the maxim that it is very expensive to buy cheap.##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The smoke curled upward from the chimneys of the suburban districts, and little rustic girls and boys were seen in all directions, hurrying homeward with their arms full of shavings -- old women, too, with their bags of rags, betook themselves somewhere -- Heaven only knows whether they had any homes, or where they went -- at any rate, with backs bent under their awful burdens, they turned into lanes and alleys, and disappeared.##newline##Sentence 2: With pinwheeling legs, flailing arms, I hurdle a new ditch and commence rushingdown the ailanthus-shaded lane leading to the country road when now, abruptly, my pace slackens, I begin a slow dogtrot which in turn becomes a walk, feet scuffing along.##newline##Target: lane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: If ever any skilful writer among us shall think it worth his while to revive and rehearse a full presentment of the matters then discussed in the newspapers under sundry classical and patriotic noms de plume, he will doubtless find in them, or elaborate from them, illustrations of some of the profoundest truths of the largest human science, while he traces through them the inchoate principles of the best assured economical and political maxims of our day.##newline##Sentence 2: wielded his favorite maxim: " It is easy to control a trained army but next to impossible to regulate a mob. "##newline##Target: maxim_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Now, as I have said before, while I am satisfied -- satisfied, beyond the possibility of a doubt, as we say at the bar -- that you have long entertained feelings toward me, tenderer than mere friendship -- forgive me, Julia, for speaking so very plainly -- I have not been satisfied that they were such as you would certainly feel for the man you should choose out of all the world for everlasting companionship -- no, no, Julia -- however presumptuous I may have been up to the point I have mentioned --##newline##Sentence 2: He opened Momofuku Noodle Bar and then Momofuku Ssm Bar in New York, tiny joints that reimagine ramen noodles and other Asian delicacies for the twenty-first century. "##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: It's not a very good time to be in a band and on a record label right now, anyway.##newline##Sentence 2: How far the same remark can be applied to another country, the constant rival and often the enemy of France, the records of the courts which take cognizance of such offences against duty, honor, and even common honesty, will bear ample but humiliating testimony.##newline##Target: record_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The stabs of scorn and contumely are given in the highest halls of liberty, but none can look upon the heart which bleeds or gangrenes as it repels them!##newline##Sentence 2: It had set off a sharp stab of memory that was humiliatingly physical in its intensity. "##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Per serving (based on 4): 105 calories, 6 gm protein, 10 gm carbohydrates, 6 gm fat, 16 mg cholesterol, 4 gm saturated fat, 404 mg sodium Creamed Spinach With Wild Mushrooms (4 to 5 servings) 1/2 ounce dried wild mushrooms, preferably porcini or cepes 1/2 cup boiling water 2 tablespoons finely chopped onion 2 tablespoons butter 20 ounces defrosted frozen chopped spinach or 2 pounds fresh spinach, washed, stemmed and chopped 1/4 cup heavy (whipping) cream 1 egg yolk Salt and pepper to taste Soak the wild mushrooms in the##newline##Sentence 2: But suppose that a barrel of flour will purchase more wine in Bordeaux, than four dollars or four ounces of silver.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Wit implies hatred or contempt of folly and crime, produces its effects by brisk shocks of surprise, uses the whip of scorpions and the branding-iron, stabs, stings, pinches, tortures, goads, teases, corrodes, undermines; Humor implies a sure conception of the beautiful, the majestic,##newline##Sentence 2: As Epton mulls over another stab at the mayor ' s office, his thoughts always drift back to the media.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Necessity had almost driven me to the sign of the ' Three Martyrs, ' to see what the man of the eagle face would give me on my cap, for they said the man at the ' Three Martyrs ' lent money on rags such as I had.##newline##Sentence 2: Don't rag on me about a few joints, will you, Felicia? "##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Remonstrance and representation of impossibility having been tried in vain, Mr. - prepared to guide me, and // Mr.-, with my bag, parasol, and bonnet in charge, returned to the edge of the pool to watch our progress.##newline##Sentence 2: Photograph Arthur Hills left nothing in the bag at the Hyatt Hill Country Resort, skillfully using the surroundings to craft an exacting, subtle gem.##newline##Target: bag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: " For every name a seperate death, for every crime a stab, a pistol shot, and a Curse! "##newline##Sentence 2: Her father was beginning to make a stab at understanding, but he still stood staring at her. "##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: the flames are circling round the point of the rock below, and, unless we can pass there, our only chance must be over the precipice.##newline##Sentence 2: His captor began to pace the floor chain-smoking, holding the rope which still circled Todd's waist.##newline##Target: circle_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Now there is, we have already intimated, a higher and more comprehensive view of God's universal kingdom, in which it includes and harmonizes these two economies, viz, nature and the supernatural, and by these two factors, like the contending forces of astronomy, settles and adjusts its orbit.##newline##Sentence 2: Extras: He also gets a skin kit that includes a cleansing gel, exfoliating scrub, shave oil, moisturizer and a medicated clearing gel for blemishes and razor bumps.##newline##Target: include_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: The morning rose that ushered in the potato digging-day, in which numerous throngs of lads and lasses dressed in their best attire, with light and merry hearts came from all parts of the adjacent country, into the town of Larne; the lads to march to the work of charity and benevolence, the lasses to witness the procession, and reward their lovers as they passed them with their smiles.##newline##Sentence 2: Just before the Conroys leave, one guest sings a song called " The Lass of Aughrim.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: In a few minutes from the time they halted, they had finished their preparations for passing the night here; the horses were loosed to graze and rest themselves, a hasty, rude shelter made from green boughs, which they cut from the trees, was prepared for Coquese, and a bed of the same, arranged for her.##newline##Sentence 2: A growing number of businesses now manufacture furniture made from plantation woods-even rare tropical varieties like teak and mahogany-that aren't from forests but from well-managed farms with the sole purpose of raising trees for lumber.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Those uncomfortable persons, however, were not yet satisfied, and tipping their tongues with the unkindest venom of all, they began to talk of a wealthy and accomplished young lady, somewhere, whom it was rumored the doctor was shortly to marry, in spite of little flirtations at home, that some people thought meant something.##newline##Sentence 2: A foreign service officer in the consul's office saw to it that Tony Lake was tipped off.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Apollo 15 is scheduled to racket out of lunar orbit Wednesday afternoon and head for earth and a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean Saturday afternoon.##newline##Sentence 2: afternoon that the Indian bought me, he started with me to his residence, which was fifty or sixty miles distant.##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Of my pearls, coming down, I will form thee a crown, To encircle thy brow young and fair; Every leaf on thy stem Shall be tipped with a gem, Every bud sparkling diamonds shall wear.##newline##Sentence 2: Tip: Some riders like to tilt the nose of the saddle down slightly (1-2 degrees) to avoid numbness in the nether regions.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Among its first official acts was the appointment of a committee to probe graft.##newline##Sentence 2: Most gardeners abroad, when they select trees with more than usual care, take what are called maiden plants those one year old from the graft, and there can be no doubt that, taking into account health, duration, and the ease with which such a tree can be made to grow into any form, this is truly the preferable size for removal into a fruit garden.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  False
This is an example. You have to answer "OK":##newline##Sentence 1: Her head -- was it such a head, as I should be proud to see, one day or other, ruling my household; educating my children?##newline##Sentence 2: He shakes his head as though he's trying to wake himself up.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer:  True
Task: Determine whether two given sentences use a target word with the same meaning or different meanings in their respective contexts.##newline##Please answer only with "True" or "False" without any additional text. When it's your turn, choose one: "True" if the target word has the same meaning in both sentences; "False" if the target word has different meanings in the sentences. I'll notify you when it's your turn.
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: We haven't seen hide nor hair of neither of ' em yet, and they must have tipped over coming home in the night.##newline##Sentence 2: Mills says parents can learn a lot about what children are capable of and pick up equipment tips as well by taking their first few hikes with a group.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Spread like fingers, primaries tip the bird into the wind's plane.##newline##Sentence 2: they expand, the spotless white of its gaping corolla is exhibited, with its protruding stamens tipped with yellow anthers.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: CSaudi Arabia has not requested that the plane be outfitted with multiple ejection racks, which would allow the plane to carry a substantial bomb load.##newline##Sentence 2: If the sun's rays be parallel to any plane, that plane to which they are parallel, is called a plane of shade.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Mr. Incledon shok his head sadly, and gave up the discussion without further words. "##newline##Sentence 2: Jill, who had been sitting on the couch with her head resting on Steve's shoulder, sat up, alert. "##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: By the mirror's show While thou ne'er wilt know Thy beauty, nor proudly thy jewels bear, Every leaf on thy stem Shall be tipped with a gem, Every bud sparkling diamonds shall wear!##newline##Sentence 2: Some traders ventured that the conference could help tip the scales back in the pound##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: She even stood at her window and watched to see him led forth to execution, when she waved to him a parting token, and then awaited calmly the return of the cart with Guilford's headless body; for, though it had been at first intended that both should suffer together on one scaffold on Tower Hill, it was deemed prudent to avoid the risk of stimulating the compassion of the people for their innocence, and youth, and beauty, into fury for their unmerited judicial murder, and it was resolved that they should suffer singly within the precinets of that bloody building.##newline##Sentence 2: Otherwise, there is a risk of tipping unintentionally.##newline##Target: risk_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Participating critics and writers included Neva Chonin, Jonathan Curiel, Chuy Varela and James Sullivan.##newline##Sentence 2: Under this denomination we are not to include all the laws given to the people of Israel.##newline##Target: include_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: He was followed by Trisha at 2 pounds 91,9 ounces and 15 inches; Erin, 3 pounds 5 ounces and 161/2 inches; and finally Maureen, 3 pounds 9 ounces and 17 inches.##newline##Sentence 2: quite, dry, dip it into a solution of twenty-five grains of iodide of potassium to one ounce of distilled water, drain it, wash it in distilled water and again drain it.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: This is clearly shown by the record of his whole life.##newline##Sentence 2: What's more, sales of poetry on records are tuned to unprecedented volume.##newline##Target: record_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: @@730447 txt Congress has begun to probe alleged profiteering in the U.S.-Soviet grain deal, as prospects widen for vastly increased trade between the two world giants.##newline##Sentence 2: They had spent their last grain of hope on the direction of life; hence they turned in the other.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Gutters running with seething matter; homeless outcasts sitting, besotted, on crazy door-steps; the vicious, with savage visage, and keen, watchful eye, loitering at the doors of filthy " groceries; " the sickly and neglected child crawling upon the side-pave, or seeking a crust to appease its hunger-all are found here, gasping, in rags, a breath of air by day, or seeking a shelter, at night, in dens so abject that the world can furnish no counterpart.##newline##Sentence 2: The setting is Ramkali rag, which relates to the season of Besant in March shortly before harvest.##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: edge of a steep slope of this rubbish, sending the stones at every step rolling and bounding into the depth below.##newline##Sentence 2: Chair Dips Sitting on the edge of a chair, place your hands on the edge by your butt.##newline##Target: edge_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: This silent Sunday morning, she folded her apron and put it on the pass-out bar, then went to the staff room, changed from her chef's whites and clogs into jeans and a long-sleeved shirt tie-dyed in soft pink and orange, with tiny dancing skeletons on it.##newline##Sentence 2: One of the bars of the prison- window had become detached, so that it could be removed without any difficulty, allowing any one of moderate dimensions to get through the aperture.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Spread like fingers, primaries tip the bird into the wind's plane.##newline##Sentence 2: This is of the same height as the preceding, flowering at the same time; flowers much larger; one variety white, tipped with red; another yellow, tipped in the same way; all are easily cultivated in a rich, loamy soil.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The morning rose that ushered in the potato digging-day, in which numerous throngs of lads and lasses dressed in their best attire, with light and merry hearts came from all parts of the adjacent country, into the town of Larne; the lads to march to the work of charity and benevolence, the lasses to witness the procession, and reward their lovers as they passed them with their smiles.##newline##Sentence 2: There, a lass in Tahitian garb was to purchase the first double ticket with chances at##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: " not if you'll let me lay my heels at your fire.##newline##Sentence 2: At your seat, point your toes down (heels up), then raise your toes up toward your knees so that you're flexing your calf muscles, suggests Rebecca W. Acosta, MPH, executive director of Traveler##newline##Target: heel_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: All the intelligence I had of him, from his house and his land and his train and his resident poets, had not prepared me for the impel sonal force of him, the frightening freedom of him.##newline##Sentence 2: It is not uncommon for the land speculators to sell a farm to a respectable settler at an unusually low price, in order to give a character to a neighbourhood where they hold other lands, and thus to use him as a decoy duck for friends or countrymen.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The Mayor's assertion came in response to a statement on Thursday by Whitman Knapp, the head of the Commission to Investigate Alleged Police Corruption, that as chief executive the Mayor " can not escape responsibility " for the widespread graft found among New York's policemen by the panel.##newline##Sentence 2: When the graft is set, it is to be bound with bass-string, beginning at the bottom and winding it upwards in a gradual manner, When the graft is bandaged, it is to be covered with clay or other composition in the same manner as directed for the cleft-graft.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: For these reasons, I was silent on that subject, and shutting myself in my chamber, delivered myself up to contemplation.##newline##Sentence 2: As if his lifelong contemplation of the way disorder violently intrudes upon the blithe assumptions of ordinary men that the world is a logical place were not a serious theme (see Kafka).##newline##Target: contemplation_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: It was in the left hand try-pot of the Pequod, with the soapstone diligently circling round me, that I was first indirectly struck by the remarkable fact, that in geometry all bodies gliding along the cycloid, my soapstone for example, will descend from any point in precisely the same time.##newline##Sentence 2: Janet circled him at a distance as though he might still be dangerous.##newline##Target: circle_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Among its first official acts was the appointment of a committee to probe graft.##newline##Sentence 2: Supposing the tree to be two or three years old from the graft or bud, a head must be formed at the intended height by heading it down in the spring to two or three buds or eyes in each shoot that is near the crown when the young shoots begin to grow; they may be /z/ taken off to three or four in number of the strongest and healthiest, as they are intended to form the tree.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: His jests, unlike some jests that we might name, Had nothing in them of a mouldy savor; But fresh, and apt, and tipped with point they came, To put grim Melancholy out of favor; To drive Imposture to his den of shame, To scourge Pretence, and make true Merit braver: So that you granted, after you had laughed, Though Wit had feathered, Truth had barbed the shaft.##newline##Sentence 2: Brown offers tips on which types of vintage chairs work well for the summer and how to get started.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: She'd insisted on ironing his linen suit herself, placing one of her monogrammed handkerchiefs between the searing hot iron and the material, because she didn't want him looking rumpled on the plane, and she said the maid always ended up leaving scorch marks on his father's clothes.##newline##Sentence 2: Now if you make the object of the same size and distance from the eye, and put the perspective plane in the same place as the original, (that is, the same proportion, measuring by a scale,) you will obtain the same angle as the original makes, and this angle will intersect the perspective plane precisely as the original angle would a pane of glass, at the given distance from the eye.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: stab to his pride with savage fortitude and he bore with self-scorn the pursuit of her innocent curiosity. "##newline##Sentence 2: As if in recoil from this stab, she angrily turned, my pillar of cloth, and it was alarming, how closely her back resembled her front.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: But for once the routiers kept faith -- the din ceased in the encampment, the lights went out one by one, and silence of dewy night fell over tent and bivouac as peacefully as if the deadliest of foes were not almost arrayed beneath it face to face.##newline##Sentence 2: I 'm convinced I thought about it more than he did -- looking at my softening face in the mirror as I sat in the beauty salon; sitting in the car wash tempted to open the window and let in that nasty soapy water inside the white Range Rover he'd insisted on buying; strolling down the aisle of Grant's mindlessly putting butter, eggs, cereal, and ground turkey in the cart.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Then Mr. Chandler ' s words rang in our ears - ' ' excellent seats, outside seats on the plane from Paris to London. '##newline##Sentence 2: The open box C, Plate 14, affords an example of lines depressed below the ground plane.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: It was then pretty late in the afternoon of a short day, and I felt a little uneasy about the chances of missing my way, should the night overtake me.##newline##Sentence 2: By afternoon he was out of a job; he was also codefendant, with his paper, in a suit for assault and battery.##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: " I know there is; and the risk increases with every moment of delay. "##newline##Sentence 2: let's not take even the remotest of risks. "##newline##Target: risk_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: INGREDIENTS: * 4 Granny Smith apples * 3/4 cup sugar * 5 ounces Roquefort (or other high-quality blue cheese) GASTRIQUE: * 3/4 cup champagne vinegar * 1 tablespoon cracked black pepper * 2 tablespoons butter, softened * Kosher salt INSTRUCTIONS: Slice apples in half lengthwise; remove seeds and tough center.##newline##Sentence 2: of Muscats, of two pounds, nine ounces, to one of the same kind weighing two pounds, three ounces, -- and such are the differences between Mr. Hutchison's Castle Malgwjn grapes and those of Eshton Hall, -- we must retain our opinion, that grapes are not improved by being fed on carrion.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: And in truth, Victor's Gallic courser repaid his master's vaunts; for he made, though he had seemed beat, so desperate a rally, that he rushed past the bay Arab almost at the goal, and won by a clear length amidst the roars of the glad spectators. "##newline##Sentence 2: A friend and I jumped a thuggish heckler at a street-corner Henry Wallace rally.##newline##Target: rally_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: She's sitting at the bar with Mitch, tossing her hair and laughing and moving her long fingers up his biceps.##newline##Sentence 2: Crossing the Takhoma branch, here thirty yards wide, we kept up the main river, crossing and recrossing the stream frequently, and toiling over rocky bars for four miles, a distance which consumed five hours, owing to the difficulties of the way.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: At the twist of a rheostat, the next room turned into a home theater with a flat screen a good two meters wide, speakers in matte black and eight swivel chairs in red velvet with individual gooseneck lamps.##newline##Sentence 2: They are all very easily propagated by layering in July: give the shoot of the present year's growth a twist, and then bury the twisted part six inches under ground; in November it will be well rooted, and can then be cut oif and transplanted in any desired situation; the tasteful husbandman may thus cover every unsightly fence rail.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The Republican lawmakers envision victory in a 15-year battle to open part of Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the 19-million-acre wilderness area that is a breeding ground for the porcupine caribou, to gas and oil drilling.##newline##Sentence 2: In the air-bubbles which form and finally escape, we find not pure oxygen, as is generally supposed, but a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen gases.##newline##Target: gas_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Officer Stab, stab, again: but heaven supports my soul To warn thee, O thou Upas of the world, Thou scourge of God -- that soon thy reign will end.##newline##Sentence 2: Only twelve miles to go, " he tells Tinkerbelle, whom he regarded throughout as " my dearest companion, " and then he adds: " The thought brought on a faint stabbing of pain. "##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: On the first page of the book was pinned the billet that had accompanied Somerville's rose.##newline##Sentence 2: He wears a ragged black jacket with a drooping rose pinned to the lapel.##newline##Target: pin_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: After this task was ended, disencumbering himself of the watch cloak, he crept down to the water's edge, and plunging into the calm basin swam##newline##Sentence 2: Tanned skin crinkles at the edge of each blue eye.##newline##Target: edge_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Bits of artificial flowers are strewn about the carpet, a shawl is seen thrown over one chair, a mantle over another; the light is half shut off-everything bears evidence of the gaieties of luxurious life, the sumptuous revel and the debauch.##newline##Sentence 2: The bitterly cold air had found every loose stitch in Caroline's sweater and now was concentrating on the metal bits of brassiere that touched her skin.##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The mourners formed a lane from the altar to the door, each holding a long, unlighted, wax taper, tipped at the larger end with red, and ornamented with fanciful paper cuttings.##newline##Sentence 2: As far as anyone knew for certain, the snitch who tipped off Sneed was never discovered.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: -- Revenge may draw a subsidy from pain, Wringing stern usury from woman's woe, And infancy's distress; but is it well For souls that hasten to a dread account Of motive and of deed at Heaven's high bar, To break their Saviour's law?##newline##Sentence 2: He opened Momofuku Noodle Bar and then Momofuku Ssm Bar in New York, tiny joints that reimagine ramen noodles and other Asian delicacies for the twenty-first century. "##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Two or three men in the crowd called out that they knew me before -- that I had been in the Ohio penitentiary -- that my name was Brown, and here is my quarrel with the colonel, his murder on the heels of it -- my dagger by his dead body, and his empty pocket-book by my house.##newline##Sentence 2: If she closes her eyes and concentrates on the mural, she could be transported back to that D &D.; Holes in the stores should open up, and she should be able to move through them effortlessly, one to another in a blink and a click of the heels.##newline##Target: heel_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: And on the plane that left for Boston at the same time as the flight to L.A., Jessica and Val barely spoke, and Mel looked out the window seeing nothing there except a vision##newline##Sentence 2: There are other kinds of planes besides the above; as the plough, for sinking a groove to receive a projecting tongue; the bead plane, for sticking beads; the snipe bill, for forming quirks; the compass plane and the forkstaff plane,##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The chairman was constantly up shouting order; and whenever a pause occurred some member or other would spring to his legs,##newline##Sentence 2: chairman of Revlon, The head of the cosmetic and health-care giant is fighting to fend off Pantry Pride, the corporate vehicle Mr. Perelman is using in his $1.##newline##Target: chairman_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: There, once in a while, was seen the thin, care-worn, melancholy visage of an old tory, with a Wig that, in times long past, had perhaps figured at a Province House ball.##newline##Sentence 2: who teaches children aged four to eight, suggests " shrinking " some elements of the game to help reduce frustration: Try using only half the court; string up a rope " net " to about the height of your child's waist; and reduce tennis ball bounce by deflating the ball slightly (or check sports shops for balls designed with kids in mind).##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: So saying, and taking the arm of our hero, bewildered at what he saw and heard, he led him aside, with little David wiping his eyes, and still unable to speak for his emotion, following them close at their heels.##newline##Sentence 2: Intent on his act, he lay back and bridged from head to heels, thrusting his skinny rib cage into the air.##newline##Target: heel_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: If I was superstitious, " said Thodore, as, emerging from the trees near the margin of the bayou, they came in full view of the largest mound, " I should believe that the sun -- which it is said the Indians worshipped -- in reproof of our unbelief of his divinity, and detestation to the truth of their religion, has kindled a flame upon the summit of the Temple. "##newline##Sentence 2: The next two to four weeks is the optimal time to walk among the gold or red trees and reddening grapevines.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The nearest he'd seen to anything like this was a line of maple and beech and hickory trees after the first hard frost had hit them.##newline##Sentence 2: Scraping, an inferior species of turpentine, is the deposite made by the sap on the bark of the tree, as it trickles down into the box.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Small droves of donkeys, with their panniers filled with the firmly moulded product of the mine, wind along the highway, and far above appears the Girgenti on the summit of a mountain.##newline##Sentence 2: He resumed his anecdote in Italian about the donkey that had gotten into the grounds the previous week, laid waste to a vegetable patch, and chewed up a wholep260chapter of manuscript.##newline##Target: donkey_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Nay, be it as it may, I have stood some risks before, and I will bide the blast even now!##newline##Sentence 2: This approach is relevant to most IS/IT projects, although some, because of their uniqueness or sheer size, incur additional risks.##newline##Target: risk_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I 'm feeling a bit faint from the heat, " Lady Dustan said.##newline##Sentence 2: The wild beast in his forest haunt, Must own him for his lord: // The desert steed, no dangers daunt With fiery hoof and flying mane, And mouth unworn by bit or rein, Must feel the lash and cord: And to the neck-encirling yoke, The untamed mountain-bull be broke.##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: It will provide an elaborate system of vents to allow relief of air pressure in either upper or lower compartments of a plane if a hole is suddenly opened in the fuselage because of a door loss, a bomb blast or other mishap.##newline##Sentence 2: For if you suppose the perspective plane set upright on the ground before you, higher than your eye; then the horizontal plane, to reach from your eye to the verge of the sky, must pass through the perspective plane, and thus make a line exactly parallel with the top and bottom line of your perspective plane.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Exit, leaning on William, D. R. H. Landlord retires behind bar.##newline##Sentence 2: By voting Sept. 5 to help boat people and bar even indirect aid to Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, we are only perpetuating the tragedy.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: More than one head turned to face her, perplexed.##newline##Sentence 2: Enter the Post Master General, carrying a mail-bag filled with the heads of six thousand defunct Deputy Post Masters.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: A resolution affirming the expediency of passing those laws was before the committee of the whole House, of which Mr. Muhlenberg was Chairman.##newline##Sentence 2: Vice Chairman: Gerald M. Levin Editorial Director: Richard B. Stolley Corporate Editor: Gilbert Rogin TIME INC.##newline##Target: chairman_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: As if it were a mark of deplorable fatuity for a babe to believe now as a multitude of wise and great and gifted men have heretofore believed in every age of the world!##newline##Sentence 2: Then he'd gone straight downstairs to the watch commander's office and asked to be reassigned to the day watch, citing a multitude of personal and even health reasons, all of them lies.##newline##Target: multitude_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The parted mouth of Tashtego revealed his shark-white teeth, which strangely gleamed as if they too had been tipped by corpusants; while lit up by the preternatural light,##newline##Sentence 2: Bathsheba's throat closed hot, and she blinked back tears as her mother rose and came to her, turning her around and tipping her chin up##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The walk was rural and quiet, through green lanes that were seldom disturbed except when the house of God was open.##newline##Sentence 2: The stroke happened as he turned from a feeder lane onto an eight-lane highway.##newline##Target: lane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: To the land he has left, that name belongs for ever, and in no instance does he bestow it upon another. "##newline##Sentence 2: The knights are satisfied; they can now rest assured that baronial government will not subvert their land tenures.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Thereat one of the savages cries out: " Yes!##newline##Sentence 2: Saying: " Go to, Sir Jakes, your jest will be the ruin of my bowels and is unfit for all but savages.##newline##Target: savage_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The good people of England were not so enlightened at the * " The old jealousies of which it " (a standing army) " was the object, no longer exist, and there can be no doubt that the establishment of a properly trained military force is not only indispensable to guaranty the national independence from hostile attack, but that it is the best force that can be employed to maintain internal tranquillity and order. "##newline##Sentence 2: We believe that the United States should pursue, on an urgent basis, serious strategic arms control negotiations consistent with the maintenance of overall parity with the Soviet Union, including, to the fullest extent possible: // - A mutual and verifiable freeze on the testing, production, and deployment of nuclear warheads, missiles and other delivery systems; // - Major, mutual, balanced and verifiable reductions of nuclear forces to lower equivalent levels, with special attention to destabilizing weapons that are vulnerable to or capable of preemptive attack; // - Strict adherence by both sides to all arms control agreements negotiated to date; // - Measures to prevent the use of nuclear weapons by each superpower, such as expanding political and technical mechanisms to reduce the risk of war by accident or miscalculation, including hot lines among nuclear weapons states and joint United States/Soviet stations to enhance the command and control of nuclear weapons systems; // - Systematic multilateral efforts, both political and technical, to restrain the reckless commerce in sensitive##newline##Target: attack_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: And with this resolve he at once repaired to the carriage, in which he took a seat with the three gentlemen of the committee, leaving me to pick my way as best I could, and drove away for the hotel, (followed at a respectful distance by the loquacious alderman, thus comically mounted,) with this strange string of cattle.##newline##Sentence 2: All those tells of millions of people, they didn't just happen to pick on Yankees.##newline##Target: pick_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The slain Greeks Do lie with faces heavenward, as becomes Sons of Miltiades.##newline##Sentence 2: He smiled, his teeth white in his dark face. "##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I have sought that moment out, or it has sought me, and I see him standing without prop in the deepening twilight, asking his father's friends to renounce the vengeance that a few hours before he himself had been furious to exact.##newline##Sentence 2: Thus, in the absence of innocent diversion, or improving study, driving men to intoxication, women to scandal, or to silly, sentimental, reason-confounding novels, half filled with romance and half with superstition, and by dint of fatiguing the mind with irrational doctrines, and tedious exhortations, disgusting youth with all instruction, and turning it loose upon a corrupt world with no light for its reason, no rein for its passions, no prop for its integrity.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I said, " Hotdamn that's a good flea market y'all got yourselves down the road, " because from the looks on the six or eight guys in the bar I knew that they sold their wares there between the pine trees of the jockey lot.##newline##Sentence 2: This shrewd argument not being thought convincing, the secretary continued to read, that ' the execution of the sentence, instead of an act of justice, would appear to all the world, and particularly to their allies, the American States, as an act of vengeance, and that if he were sufficiently master of the French language, he would, in the name of his brethren of America, present a petition at their bar against the execution of##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Clear as crystal) sparkling with carbonic acid gas, and effervescing quite as much as champagne, it was nevertheless miserably cold; and the first morning, what with the gas, and what with the low temperature of this cold iron water, it was about as much I could do to swallow it; and, for a few seconds, feeling as if it had sluiced my stomach completely by surprise, I stood hardly knowing what was about to happen; when, instead of my teeth chattering as I expected, I felt the water suddenly grow warm within my waistcoat, and a slight intoxication, or rather exhilaration, succeeded##newline##Sentence 2: In the mid-1990s, Abramoff persuaded Russian oil and gas clients to donate $1 million to a conservative advocacy group called the U.S. Family Network, which was set up by former DeLay chief of staff Edwin Buckham and collected $2.5 million in its five##newline##Target: gas_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Already the quilt was in the frames and laid out, as the marking was called; the chamber was all ready for the guests and Ellen said she thought she had been pretty smart if she did say it herself. "##newline##Sentence 2: University of Kentucky Art Museum: " The Art of Comfort: Antique Quilts and Bed Coverings from the Pilgrim/Roy Collection "; to August 13.##newline##Target: quilt_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Schiller appears to have resigned his professorship, or at least to have suspended his attention to its duties, after the attack of illness above mentioned, although the fact is not precisely stated by the biographer, and was thus deprived of his ordinary means of living.##newline##Sentence 2: The AIDS virus insinuates itself into the genetic makeup of T cells, destroying them or preventing them from orchestrating attacks on disease organisms.##newline##Target: attack_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: He deals with the parts of the uni verse and the whole of the universe, and he theorizes that things that look like separate parts of the universe emerge out of a pool, which he calls the common pool of information.##newline##Sentence 2: errand to those parts, and his surprise at meeting with English traders in a country to which England had no pretensions; intimating that, in future, any intruders of the kind would be rigorously dealt with.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: paperback books, such cheap props as ping-pong balls and drinking straws.##newline##Sentence 2: stead of serving to suspend the tie-beam from the principals, is a prop to the latter.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: And, as the grafts gradually extend by growth, the remainder of the top may, by successive excisions, be entirely removed.##newline##Sentence 2: Lung transplants done in 32 patients during the last ten years have been quite disappointing, with only 3 patients living for more than thirty days | with a functioning graft.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: this, convinced me her words were not idly said. "##newline##Sentence 2: Finding one's voice isn't just an emptying and purifying oneself of the words of others but an adopting and embracing of filiations, communities, and discourses.##newline##Target: word_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: What I have seen as a part of the will of that God who is so wise as to do nothing and require nothing in /z/ vain, can not be so accounted by me.##newline##Sentence 2: should be part of a student's education (Lee 1967, 117, 121).##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Here are innumerable lakes, with which the whole landscape is gemmed, generally skirted with fine forest growths, and so clear that a late traveler in his enthusiasm says, that in looking into them one can see through to the other side of the globe and view the Chinese picking tea!##newline##Sentence 2: While the Sapsuckers fumed in traffic, the home team had chosen back roads in north Jersey, logging three grassland species the Sapsuckers never picked up.##newline##Target: pick_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The witness to the violent assault in the road, admits that this boy was conveyed out of the city, in the night, and forcibly placed within the farm-house -- or rather the disgusting charnel house -- the mere contemplation of which was sufficient to have deprived him of his senses, if not of his life.##newline##Sentence 2: Like religion the contemplation of history devalues the present, and, weakening our place, reconciles us to having one.##newline##Target: contemplation_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: read, (and all read in this our happy land;) this book will be sought after by the fair sex, inasmuch as it treats of the gay and the grave -- the good and bad -- of ladies, and of those who, next to soldiers, are the delight of ladies; we mean players; those lively, happy, delightful children of the mimic world, who present to the minds of youth a picture of enchanting power, ever varying and ever bright.##newline##Sentence 2: was Joel who had poured everything he had into the firm for the past ten years, Joel who had single-handedly turned it into a major player in the marketplace.##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: He had stopped running when he reached the pasture and had walked westward to the brow of the mountain overlooking the highway, and then south, keeping close to the edge. "##newline##Sentence 2: Trees of medium and smaller size should be so interspersed with those of larger growth, as to break up all formal sweeps in the line produced by the tops of their summits, and occasionally, low trees should be planted on the outer edge of the mass, to connect it with the humble verdure of the surrounding sward.##newline##Target: edge_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: None of her fears or dangers disturbed his repose, and when the morning light allowed her to gaze on his sweet face, tears of joy and thankfulness flowed fast down her cheeks, that she had been enabled thus to shield that dear, innocent one from the savages##newline##Sentence 2: While the savages were drinking outside the door merrymaking in a hurry to get the poor old thing under the sods.##newline##Target: savage_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: CENTRAL Pittsburgh (12-4, first) THE GOOD: It doesn't get any better than Rod Woodson at cornerback, the best defensive player and the best special-teams player in the league.##newline##Sentence 2: At Vienna there is a machine which copies writing, and also an automaton chess player, which plays the second pari.##newline##Target: player_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Called payment in kind (PIK), the program aims to invigorate the wilted farm economy by reducing bin-busting surpluses, driving up depressed prices, cutting Government costs for farm subsidies and grain storage, and saving farmers production expenses.##newline##Sentence 2: much, that grain crops could not be cultivated under them with advantage, After a drive of about an hour and a quarter, we arrived at the first of Messrs.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: " Well, I'll let you play for a few bars and accumulate a backlog. "##newline##Sentence 2: Practically, we know that nine tenths either goes to the mint as soon as it is washed out of the earth, or is cast into stamped bars which perform all the purposes of coin.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: He must have set to his work with some such feeling towards the world, as he would probably think well expressed by the words, " There!##newline##Sentence 2: let himself go to his wife in the words that she later recalled for Churchill and that he has quoted in The Gathering Storm.##newline##Target: word_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: To some it sounds like a mob of crows, to others a donkey's bray.##newline##Sentence 2: Leaving our donkeys at its foot, and following the nimble footsteps of my little Arab girl, we climbed by a steep ascent to the first range of tombs.##newline##Target: donkey_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: ANSELMO They come From princes that are traffickers in rags.##newline##Sentence 2: I gave the mother of modern birth control more than period costume -- I gave her a period, complete with a meticulously reproduced menstrual rag.##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Come, my friends -- who's for the ball? "##newline##Sentence 2: That happens when you don't get on top of the ball or throw it without the proper arm action, " Willis says.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Particularly as the weathercock's a silverside, with a gold ball in its mouth!##newline##Sentence 2: Wedging myself into the pack, I tried to make a grab at the man with the ball.##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Mr. Leycraft's case is a very bad one, ' says the keeper with his twist in his mouth.##newline##Sentence 2: For a long time, the reader is not told, while the narrator sifts the aging murderer's memories for the quirks of mind and the twists of fate that led to the crisis.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: A fellow can't drive tandem without having his leader always out of sight ' round some twist or other in ' em.##newline##Sentence 2: Capricorn One is the first decent one of the lot: it kills two hours with a breathless progression of incredible plot twists and daredevil aerial stunts.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: the desired pitch -- fearing, also, lest his station might somewhat involve himself in the meshes he was weaving around others, the sagacious chairman, upon the first show of violence, roared out his resignation, and descended from his place.##newline##Sentence 2: Under chairman Bob Herz, FASB has embarked on a redo of income statements so that they disclose more specifically whether earnings come from operations or from nonbusiness items like pension gains. "##newline##Target: chairman_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: But when, as he got accustomed to the place, he accosted them with a gentle voice, said a complimentary word for their sign-board, with its full-length sailor's lass -- Hope upon her anchor, or sturdy Strength, standing square upon his pins -- they began at once to have a fancy for the old man.##newline##Sentence 2: head of the New York Legal Aid office in the criminal courts, who has been defending indigents since he left Fordham University lass School in 1937. remembei s ease where a defendant misted nn SI anding trial (lest overwhelm ing case against him.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: which were of very large grain, and so loose that they had to wade nearly knee deep through them.##newline##Sentence 2: GRAINS AND SOYBEANS: Futures prices for wheat and soybeans fell.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: About one tenth part only of this vast territory is as yet settled by a civilized population.##newline##Sentence 2: In order to make this complex problem manageable it is necessary to break it down into its respective parts.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: All the varieties of grain and grasses yield abundant crops.##newline##Sentence 2: GRAINS AND SOYBEANS: Futures prices for wheat and soybeans fell.##newline##Target: grain_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: cried the ruthless despot; and, at the word, the Trailer gave but a single twist to the pistol, and the boy screamed aloud with his agony.##newline##Sentence 2: As thousands of therapy patients are " discovering " repressed memories of childhood sexual abuse, a smaller number are adding a new twist: they are recalling abductions by aliens.##newline##Target: twist_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: King Charles II Spoken like an oracle; and did not you say that this pretty lass was his niece?##newline##Sentence 2: If you want to leave the lass here, though, I'll look after her myself, and... " " You misunderstand me, " Fiona said in a harsh voice.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Exit, leaning on William, D. R. H. Landlord retires behind bar.##newline##Sentence 2: The list shall be published annually in the ABA Approved Law Schools: Statistical Information on American Bar Association Approved Law Schools, Review of Legal education, a publication which is published by the Section and single copies of which are distributed by the Consultant upon request, without charge.##newline##Target: bar_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I would not turn on my heel, ' said he, to save my life. '##newline##Sentence 2: And it's because Rumsfeld has dug in his heels and##newline##Target: heel_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Father Eustaquio followed her into a low ceiled chamber, where seated in a cane chair, with her face leaning upon her hand sat the lovely##newline##Sentence 2: He landed on his face, his lips stinging in the snow.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: burning at the Tate of four feet per hour, twenty-two ounces, or a pint and six ounces, of water, and four feet of carbonic acid, which will render four hundred cubic feet of atmospheric air unfit for respiration. "##newline##Sentence 2: THE CAlf WAS found later the same day in front of 2732 N. Mozart St. A policeman testilled that a half-pint bottle of brandy with about one ounce of brandy left in it was found on the right scat of Salazar's car.##newline##Target: ounce_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Some of the Protestant churches resound with a sacred hymn, or the voice of the clergyman reading a portion of the liturgy or discipline, calculated to inspire charitable feelings, while the contribution-box or bag makes its begging tour among the pews.##newline##Sentence 2: night and turns away, walks down the rolling runway, slides into a lower bunk at the side of the bus where he has stored his bags.##newline##Target: bag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Southbound lanes of Interstate 87 (the New York State Thruway) south of the Tappan Zee Bridge closed.##newline##Sentence 2: The 16th of July showed more favourable symptoms, and Captain Penny was seen working for a lane of water, a long way in-shore of us.##newline##Target: lane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Neither the noble fiction of the Stoics, that vice alone is an evil, and that grief is not one; nor the less elevated assertion /q/ of the ' UtiliiarianSt that our duty is always conformed to our interest, can sustain examination.##newline##Sentence 2: Against the mobile background of the never completely formalised relations between the law of obscenity and the social policing of pornography, and of the migration of specialist pornography's themes and figures into the circuits of a more generally disseminated educative fiction in the guise of ethical techniques for (sexual) self-improvement, our plan is to review the English Obscene Publications Act of 1959 and the 1960 case in which the new statute was to have received its definitive construction, Regina v. Penguin Books Ltd., popularly known as the trial of Lady Chatterley's Lover.##newline##Target: fiction_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Just opposite to this, is Breakneck, which rises, almost perpendicularly, from the edge of the water, and seems the frowning guardian of the pass.##newline##Sentence 2: The parents raised their babies on the edge of the pond, and during nice evenings we would eat supper on the swing under the tree and watch them play on the water.##newline##Target: edge_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: No one ever called her beautiful, nor stroked her hair, nor kissed her brow; and when she stood by the side of the twin sisters at the gate, and the people, in passing, praised the flaxen##newline##Sentence 2: He strokes her hair, then looks up at me and tells me with his eyes to mourn us all.##newline##Target: stroke_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: props, still tried to locate them in a life that had nothing but itself to consider.##newline##Sentence 2: The appointing power is the main prop of Executive authority, as before observed, and if the President made no removals, would in a great measure lie dormant.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: He had pulled the curls over his eyes, and tied up his face with a great handkerchief over the cap, as Gruffy has been doing lately when she had the face-ache, and he went about among the little chaps in such a motherly, bustling way, it was quite affecting.##newline##Sentence 2: Sal Ianello's face was obscured, but his back was ramrod straight.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Clothe him with finest stuffs, yourselves in rags Which scarcely cover ye: furnish for him costly couch, Yours the hard plank: yield to him the labor Of your youth, your life, and when useless grown, To be cast off, like superannuated Brutes, to die unsuccoured.##newline##Sentence 2: It may be that a good translation of one of the major rags will serve to illustrate the point one day.##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: You hit him and he works like a donkey, like a soldier who can not break his oath of allegiance to king and country.##newline##Sentence 2: -- 13 /z/ end a number of donkeys, upon which they take a wholesome exercise, and acquire the elements of equitation at three sous a ride.##newline##Target: donkey_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: All this I did see, and I saw it either while I was on the top of that rock, holding by the flag-staff, afraid to move lest the rock should tip over among the houses, and afraid to let go, lest I should be blown away; or I saw it, after I had escaped; but furthermore I can not say, for while I was looking about me and wondering at the beauty of the##newline##Sentence 2: Manning helped devise a White House spy network that would give him tips about what L.B.J.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: This of course, if accepted, included present liberty, and pardon for all past offences.##newline##Sentence 2: Sandy Longton, president of the Mayfair Civic Association, a community organization that includes part of Portage Park, and chairman of the Coalition to Save the Ramps and Bridges, says all three aldermen have been concerned and cooperative on the issue. "##newline##Target: include_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: On the way, the trees did not burn.##newline##Sentence 2: The tops of the trees are far below, and as one looking down upon them hears the various cries and whistles of the birds come up, and marks the vultures wheeling round in aerial circles over the trees far below one's feet, then it is that you realise that at last the forest, with its world of foliage, has been surmounted.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The only child he really likes is Susie, the Eichelburger girl across the hedge and alleyway and white barn, who's high-strung and secretive, and every bit as friendless as he is.##newline##Sentence 2: The last form hut one tool, the stock being the handle, to the bottom of which may be fitted a variety of steel bits of different bores and shapes, for boring and widening out holes in wood and metal, as countersinks, rimers, and taper shell bits.##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: That was work fit only for Greeks, Cubans, Hungarians, and other such ignorant savages.##newline##Sentence 2: is an autobio0raphy of a wild, unadulterated savage, gall yet fermenting in his veins, his heart still burning with the sense of wrong, the words of wrath and scorn yet scarce cold upon his lips, (If you xvish to fight us, come on, ') and his hands still reeking with recent slau *, hter.##newline##Target: savage_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I fear I dunna drink tea, lass. "##newline##Sentence 2: Meanwhile William and I were already on foot, and our mules were led on by the guide's daughter, a pretty little lass of ten or twelve, who accompanied us in the capacity of mule driver.##newline##Target: lass_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: We haven't seen hide nor hair of neither of ' em yet, and they must have tipped over coming home in the night.##newline##Sentence 2: Event stylist Colin Cowie shares smart meal-planning tips: For an easy-to-make egg dish, toast sliced bread.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: been through so much excitement as you have lately; and, " continued Willoughby, smiling, " a man who keeps all his passions down with the rein and bit, except his ambition, must expect the blues, as you call them -- particularly, if he has such strong passions, in other respects, as a certain friend of mine, they will get the bit between their teeth, sometimes, and bound away.##newline##Sentence 2: There's always a bit of money to be had for a worthy cause in Boston.##newline##Target: bit_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I'll have a starling shall be taught to speak/Nothing but " Mortimer, " and give it him/To keep his anger still in motion: in Frank's contemplation of such passion, perfectly preserved, forever safe, his stomach forgot itself.##newline##Sentence 2: Irseemed to us not impossible, that Mr Moore had been induced to choose this subject by the consciousness, that he could touch it without profanation, or by the hope, that the contemplation of such things would purify and elevate his mind.##newline##Target: contemplation_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: This meant: a fast tour of the Merchandise Mart; phone calls ad lib; lunch at his friend Eli Schulman's steak house with Bob Dachman, executive director of the Little City Foundation, a charity Henny sponsors, which helps blind and retarded children; a visit to Eli himself, who was laid up in the hospital recuperating from an operation; a fast tour of Chicago; a bus to the airport; a plane back to New York; dinner with some friends.##newline##Sentence 2: You will observe that the two circles partly described on the plate, for the purpose of determining the opening of the box, are circles standing upright on the ground plane, and not laying on it, as are the circles in Plate 10.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: At the auction of 46 years ' and a rumored $1,600,000 worth of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer props and costumes, Debbie Reynolds tried to buy her own brass bed from The Unsinkable Molly Brown, but just didn't want to go as high as $3,000.##newline##Sentence 2: There is no difficulty in conceiving the prop A to be the fulcrum, W the weight, and E the power (1 80).##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: When darkness came on, sky and sea roared and split with the thunder, and blazed with the lightning, that showed the disabled masts fluttering here and there with the rags which the first fury of the##newline##Sentence 2: She was surrounded by a pack of dogs that grabbed at her arms and legs and pulled her across the ground like a rag doll.##newline##Target: rag_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: It is part of the mission of writers to show, and part of the mission of preachers to proclaimand proclaiming it, to exhibit it in their character and careerthat acquirement and study are to be subordinate to Development; that development itself, even at its perfection, is to be tributary to Action; and that action, to be worthy of the powers of man, must be devoted to permanent and great interests; must be harmonious##newline##Sentence 2: My situation in this revival of the Foundation's activities called for great tact on my part in dealing with Goff, for the Committee had acted without consulting him.##newline##Target: part_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: YOUR BEST LOVE PROPS: The shower stall, Wonderbras.##newline##Sentence 2: In vain would that man claim the tribute of patriotism who would labour to subvert these great pillars of human happiness, these firmest props of the destinies of men and citizens.##newline##Target: prop_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: At last, toward evening, the old familiar black heads of thunderclouds rose fast above the horizon, and the same deep muttering of distant thunder that had become the ordinary accompaniment of our afternoon's journey began to roll hoarsely over the prairie.##newline##Sentence 2: Sitting in on a class in the late afternoon, listening to him draw on his experiences from his Stanley days, I imagined that beyond the nineteen young peo- ple seated in the room, he was speaking to all those he knew back home, explaining that he had done as well as any executive could, in a very changed world, to preserve Stanley as it was.##newline##Target: afternoon_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: With other accomplishments, Cheesy has learned to smoke; and often, in the evening, you may see him standing in the door-way of some public building, with his hat tipped jauntily one side, puffing his penny cigar, and ogling the crowd.##newline##Sentence 2: Every day, investigators follow up on four or five tips that, so far, have yielded few results, Long said.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Shadows from the fire leaped and danced like pagan phantoms among the black trunks of trees.##newline##Sentence 2: In the first case, suppose it is desired to form a group of trees,##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: There, once in a while, was seen the thin, care-worn, melancholy visage of an old tory, with a Wig that, in times long past, had perhaps figured at a Province House ball.##newline##Sentence 2: For this week's profile of triple-threat comedy star Tim Allen, Ressner -- along with correspondent Patrick Cole -- carried the ball for a touchdown. "##newline##Target: ball_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: From its anchorage to the wharf its tall mast reached, and tipped with its wavy shadow the countenance of a quiet idler,##newline##Sentence 2: Meanwhile, the Proprietary Association, a Washington-based organization that represents the nation's major pharmaceutical manufacturers, unveiled detailed proposals for packaging that would clearly tip off the consumer when a product has been tampered with.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: that at the grand festival of St. Nicholas, which might perhaps assimilate to a twenty-fifth of November dinner of our own modern Corporation, that not only the Chief Scout, but the lordly and substantial burgomasters, and the well fed Schepens of the honest city of Nieuw Amsterdam, or New-York, all appeared arrayed in certain calico morning gowns, which were adorned in lieu of bloemates, with orange trees and singing birds: the which material, had formed part of the cargo of a Spanish galleon which Kid had lately captured, and openly sent into the bay, consigned, as usual in these cases to some respectable trading firm; much in a like manner as our late uncommissioned privateer captures of the ships of a friendly nation; and for which an agent of the original owners had instituted a suit of recovery before the above mentioned Scout, who acted as Judge, together with his other municipal capacities; and as might be expected, the said suit shortly after the aforesaid festival of St. Nicholas, was decided##newline##Sentence 2: On the way, the trees did not burn.##newline##Target: tree_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Then there is not a single provision, in the whole system, for the delivery of a fugitive; nor any record, in the whole history, of a single case of such delivery; nor any thing in all the laws and history, that looks as though such delivery was intended.##newline##Sentence 2: But communications and records officer William Belk of West Columbia, S.C., said he " didn't want hate to end this. "##newline##Target: record_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: PAGE 74: White cotton blankets and floral quilt: Laura Fisher/Antique Quilts &; Americana.##newline##Sentence 2: At the quilting, apple, and shelling bees there are numbers of the fair sex, and games, dancing, and merrymaking are invariably kept up till the morning.##newline##Target: quilt_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I had just raised her warm hand to my lips, hoping, after I had kissed it, to engage her in conversation, when the door of a room on the opposite side of the passage opened, and a queer little man, with a hump on his back, and otherwise deformed, issued therefrom, and with a nervous step hurried down stairs, muttering to himself like one lost in his own contemplations.##newline##Sentence 2: Out of that isolation in motion comes every inspiration, from contemplation (Langston Hughes ' " The Negro Speaks of Rivers ") to adventure (Hemingway's stories) to despair.##newline##Target: contemplation_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: No, " he answered; and replacing the hat on his head##newline##Sentence 2: More than one head turned to face her, perplexed.##newline##Target: head_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I do admire the millintery, where the sogers in their fancy unicorns look jest like a patchwork quilt.##newline##Sentence 2: I 'm covered with a quilt the likes of which I've never seen.##newline##Target: quilt_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: To return to the house, rouse the servants in the kitchen, get lights and survey the premises, consumed some time; and, in the meanwhile, the wounded robber made a desperate effort to crawl off; he had crept down the steps into the yard, but had fainted from loss of blood, and, when picked up, was quite insensible, with a severe wound in the thigh.##newline##Sentence 2: Pick a specific time to walk and stick to it.##newline##Target: pick_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The sick lady hastily drew the curtains of her bed between her and the group at the fire, and then throwing herself with her face on the pillow, murmured wildly, " Save me!##newline##Sentence 2: When I walked in she'd already be at the kitchen table with her schoolbooks spread out in front of her, hunched over in her chair, arms crossed, a frown pulling her face down to a point.##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The English boy threw himself forward and received a stab, aimed at the heart of his old friend; and the priest, with one convulsive bound, and one loud shriek of agony, withdrew the sword and plunged it deeply in his own breast.##newline##Sentence 2: As if in recoil from this stab, she angrily turned, my pillar of cloth, and it was alarming, how closely her back resembled her front.##newline##Target: stab_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: The parted mouth of Tashtego revealed his shark-white teeth, which strangely gleamed as if they too had been tipped by corpusants; while lit up by the preternatural light,##newline##Sentence 2: So I tipped all the men off the board.##newline##Target: tip_vb##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: And further, I had some notion of a dozen or more trimly dressed youths, with bronzed faces newly shaved, and shining with their late ablutions -- all this I faintly apprehended, before the cavalcade disappeared, in a cloud of dust.##newline##Sentence 2: He smiled, his teeth white in his dark face. "##newline##Target: face_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: For further reading, try: Eureka: Gold, Graft and Grievances, by B. and B.##newline##Sentence 2: It would be more nearly correct to say, that the, duration of a variety is limited more or less by that of its original, and that any inherent disease in it will be continued, in all its buds and grafts, although the superior vitality of the stock may mitigate its virulence, or protract its dormant period.##newline##Target: graft_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: But her last words were, ' I 'm dying a stranger in a strange land. '##newline##Sentence 2: The day previous to our landing was a Sunday, and I was pleased to observe the decorum which pervaded the ship.##newline##Target: land_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: I do admire the millintery, where the sogers in their fancy unicorns look jest like a patchwork quilt.##newline##Sentence 2: You could see, though not far, into the dim interior, the wide planks of the floor, the corner of a bed, the crosshatching that was a nine-patch quilt, and, scarcely there, merest suggestion, the intertwined legs of a couple.##newline##Target: quilt_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
Now it's your turn. You have to answer with "True" or "False"##newline##Sentence 1: Scranton often prowled the plane, ignoring the FASTEN SEAT BELTS sign, to chat with reporters.##newline##Sentence 2: If the sun's rays be parallel to any plane, that plane to which they are parallel, is called a plane of shade.##newline##Target: plane_nn##newline##Question: Do the target word in both sentences have the same meaning in their respective contexts?##newline##Answer: 
