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You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Ebrahim, whose company has been sending American travelers on East African safaris for 13 years, said that his company had received only one cancellation as a result of the embassy bombings _ and that he did not expect many more. We had one cancellation from a couple who decided they were just going to wait and (see) what happened, he said.
Verb: see
|
Solution: No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: Carpenter said the U.S. government's counterterrorism program has paid out over $6 million in some 20 cases around the world for credible information. On the FBI list, Bin Laden and Kopp replace two former Libyan intelligence agents (charged) in the Dec. 21, 1988, bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 that killed 259 people on the plane and 11 on the ground in Lockerbie, Scotland.
Verb: charged
SOLUTION: Yes
PROBLEM: Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic can now participate in NATO strategy planning, because all NATO member states have approved their joining the alliance, German defense minister Rudolf Scharping said Saturday. The Netherlands early this week became the last country to (ratify) NATO expansion to include the three former Warsaw Pact nations.
Verb: ratify
SOLUTION: Yes
PROBLEM: A total of $650,000, meanwhile, is being offered for information leading to the arrest of Kopp, who is charged with gunning down Dr. Barnett Slepian last fall in his home in Buffalo, N.Y. Slepian provided legal abortions in western New York state. The standard $50,000 reward for information (leading) to a listed fugitive's capture comes on top of a $500,000 reward announced earlier by Attorney General Janet Reno, plus a $100,000 award offered previously by the FBI.
Verb: leading
SOLUTION:
|
Yes
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Part 1. Definition
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Part 2. Example
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Answer: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Part 3. Exercise
Lamen Khalifa Fhimah and Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi are charged with murder, conspiracy to commit murder and violations of international aviation safety laws. Bin Laden and Kopp are the 455th and 456th persons to be (placed) on the FBI's most wanted list, which began in 1950.
Verb: placed
Answer:
|
No
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[EX Q]: In the aftermath of the Cold War, she said, NATO must be ready to face an aggressive regime, a rampaging faction, or a terrorist group. And we know that if, past is prologue, we (face) a future in which weapons will be more destructive at longer distances than ever before.
Verb: face
[EX A]: No
[EX Q]: It allows us to spread his name far and wide across Canada and say that he is wanted for attempted murder, said police Inspector Dave Bowen. Kopp, who is from Vermont, was (indicted) last year in the October 1998 shooting death of Dr. Barnet Slepian, an obstetrician in Buffalo, New York.
Verb: indicted
[EX A]: Yes
[EX Q]: Calling the mother of Elian Gonzalez an excellent girl, President Fidel Castro said Friday she had been practically kidnapped by the boyfriend who perished along with her on the boat wreck her 6-year-old son survived. Castro's remarks to a conference of economists were (aimed) at those who say that Elian should remain in the United States because his mother sacrificed his life to take her to freedom, a vision he called a cliche.
Verb: aimed
[EX A]:
|
Yes
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example input: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example output: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: He added that a ceremonial accession would still be held at the NATO Washington summit on April 24 and 25. The March accession will enable the three countries to be eligible for (signing) the summit documents that will include the alliance's new strategic concept and post-Madrid development plan, the official added.
Verb: signing
A:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
Inspector Keith MacCaskill of the Winnipeg Police Service, a Canadian member of a law-enforcement task force investigating all five of the shootings, said he had never heard of the men. Moskal emphasized that no one has been (named) as a suspect in Slepian's death.
Verb: named
answer:
No
question:
Investigators said Friday they found a rifle buried near his home in the Buffalo suburb of Amherst. The gun was sent to the FBI laboratory in Washington to (determine) whether it was used to kill Slepian.
Verb: determine
answer:
No
question:
Ebrahim, whose company has been sending American travelers on East African safaris for 13 years, said that his company had received only one cancellation as a result of the embassy bombings _ and that he did not expect many more. We had one cancellation from a couple who decided they were just going to wait and (see) what happened, he said.
Verb: see
answer:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Part 1. Definition
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Part 2. Example
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Answer: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Part 3. Exercise
But while Cuban exiles outside the courthouse cheered Lazaro and his family, their angry taunts seemed to shock Manuel. His lawyer, however, insists he will (continue) to stand up for what he thinks is right.
Verb: continue
Answer:
|
No
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
On Aug. 7, Bushnell, Trade Minister Joseph Kimotho and others had just ended a news conference in a building adjacent to the embassy. They were talking when the bomb (went) off, killing 247 people and wounding more than 5,000 others.
Verb: went
answer:
Yes
question:
How it changes things is a little hard to say at this point. If the father shows up in Miami and decides to go and (ring) the doorbell of his relatives and find his son, well, the family in Miami is on record as saying they would turn over Elian to him.
Verb: ring
answer:
No
question:
Gonzalez has not appeared publicly since the announcement. Neither he nor Elian's four grandparents could be (located) in their hometown of Cardenas, east of Havana.
Verb: located
answer:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a definition of a task first, then an example. Follow the example to solve a new instance of the task.
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Why? This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
New input: You know why ? To (give) Elian an injection and take him back to Cuba.
Verb: give
Solution:
|
No
| 0
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NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Teacher: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Teacher: Now, understand the problem? If you are still confused, see the following example:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Reason: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this instance: Authorities have said they believe the weapon may have been buried in advance of the shooting, with the killer digging it up to fire the shot, then reburying it and fleeing. Kopp also has been linked, through DNA testing, to a strand of hair (found) near where the sniper fired, law enforcement sources have said.
Verb: found
Student:
|
Yes
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: Among the first three former Warsaw Pact countries to accede to NATO on Friday were also Poland and the Czech Republic. The ambassadors of Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic issued a joint statement Friday saying the three countries' entry into NATO will consolidate Europe's security and help (eliminate) threats to it.
Verb: eliminate
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: I formally object to the legal moves made or being made by those who are arbitrarily retaining Elian, Gonzalez said in the letter, dated Monday. In the letter, Gonzalez said he does not recognize the jurisdiction of the U.S. court system, which is weighing an attempt by Elian's Miami relatives to (block) his return to Cuba.
Verb: block
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: The New York Times says in an editorial on Thursday, Jan. 6 : & QL ; The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service made a reasonable decision Wednesday in ruling that Elian Gonzalez, the 6-year-old boy who survived an ill-fated migrant smuggling trip across the Florida Straits, should be (reunited) with his father back in Cuba.
Verb: reunited
SOLUTION:
|
No
| 8
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NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
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fs_opt
|
Detailed Instructions: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
See one example below:
Problem: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Kopp vanished after the shooting, and the car was found abandoned at the Newark, N.J., airport in December. Officials said DNA test results (showed) a likelihood that a strand of hair discovered behind Slepian's home came from Kopp.
Verb: showed
Solution:
|
Yes
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
The arrest brought to nine the number of people in custody in connection with the bombings. U.S. authorities (scheduled) a news conference for later today in New York.
Verb: scheduled
answer:
Yes
question:
The FBI is conducting further DNA tests of the hair found outside Dr. Slepian's home. This more extensive set of tests could enable officials to declare an absolute match between the two hair strands, the first law enforcement official (said).
Verb: said
answer:
Yes
question:
The boy's father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, lives in Cuba and wants him back. But Elian's relatives in Miami have fought to keep the boy permanently, saying they could (provide) him with a better life than he would have on the communist island.
Verb: provide
answer:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Teacher: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Teacher: Now, understand the problem? If you are still confused, see the following example:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Reason: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this instance: What matters most is that Elian, after losing his mother and stepfather in a disastrous sea voyage to the United States last November, needs the love and care of surviving family members who've known him all his life _ his father and both sets of grandparents in Cuba. True, they ca n't (give) him all the material things his Miami benefactors can, but there are intangibles in close family bonds that are more valuable than bicycles and trips to Disney World.
Verb: give
Student:
|
No
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Detailed Instructions: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
See one example below:
Problem: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: We shall prove that new members can indeed add to the weight of the alliance, he said. The location for Friday's ceremony was chosen by Albright, who as secretary of state (is) the depository of NATO's accession accords.
Verb: is
Solution:
|
No
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: The Cape Argus newspaper reported today that a Tanzanian man was arrested, and that authorities were searching for accomplices. The Argus quoted immigration official Jurie de Wet as (saying) the arrests stemmed from information about requests for asylum and temporary residence in Cape Town.
Verb: saying
SOLUTION: Yes
PROBLEM: Slepian was the mainstay of Buffalo's only abortion clinic before he was shot to death last Oct. 23 at his home in suburban Amherst. But the decision by District Attorney Frank C. Clark to (begin) presenting evidence to a state grand jury suggests that he has amassed enough material to support a criminal indictment for homicide.
Verb: begin
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: What matters most is that Elian, after losing his mother and stepfather in a disastrous sea voyage to the United States last November, needs the love and care of surviving family members who've known him all his life _ his father and both sets of grandparents in Cuba. True, they ca n't (give) him all the material things his Miami benefactors can, but there are intangibles in close family bonds that are more valuable than bicycles and trips to Disney World.
Verb: give
SOLUTION:
|
No
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: But Albright and other U.S. officials have strongly disputed that notion, saying the priority had been rescuing all possible, African and American. On Friday, when Albright set aside vacation plans for the hastily planned trip to East Africa, the State Department lifted a warning against travel to Kenya, whose economy relies heavily on foreign visitors, to further (ease) any strain in the aftermath of the tragedy.
Verb: ease
|
Solution: No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: This is an assault not only on individual doctors but on the rights and liberties of all Americans. Last week the FBI joined Canadian authorities to (investigate) a series of unsolved sniper shootings of doctors in Canada and western New York dating to 1994.
Verb: investigate
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: Gonzalez for months refused requests by Elian's Miami relatives to go to the United States to claim the boy. At the same time, the lawyers for the boy's relatives in Miami said they might (try) to argue that his father is an unfit parent.
Verb: try
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: The official said the hair was in a cap that authorities found very near the location from which the sniper is thought to have fired the rifle bullet that killed Slepian as he stood in the kitchen of his home in the Buffalo suburb of Amherst, N.Y. But The Buffalo News reported Friday that the hair (was) in a packet, with at least two bullets, that was found buried in the ground more than 50 feet from a tree where police believe the sniper stood and fired.
Verb: was
SOLUTION:
|
Yes
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: It brings it home. D'Amato's aides would not (comment) about the political ramifications of the slaying, and Schumer's aides would not talk about whether they planned to refer to it in any advertisements, or whether the candidate planned to use it on the campaign trail.
Verb: comment
|
Solution: No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
One example is below.
Q: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
A: No
Rationale: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service said earlier this week that once Gonzalez arrives in the United States it will begin the process to transfer Elian to his custody from the Miami relatives who have been caring for him since he was rescued off the coast of Florida in late November. The Miami kin has been battling to (keep) him in the United States, saying it can give him a better life off the communist island.
Verb: keep
A:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example input: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example output: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: He was soon released and appeared to be reasonably healthy when he appeared in court the next morning. But while Cuban exiles outside the courthouse cheered Lazaro and his family, their angry taunts seemed to (shock) Manuel.
Verb: shock
A:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Part 1. Definition
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Part 2. Example
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Answer: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Part 3. Exercise
But one abortion opponent, the Rev. Donald Spitz, the founder of Pro-Life Virginia, described Slepian's killer as a hero for ending the physician's bloodthirsty practice. We as Christians have a responsibility to protect the innocent from being murdered, Spitz said in a statement released to The Associated Press, the same way we would want someone to (protect) us.
Verb: protect
Answer:
|
No
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Moves to keep Elian in this country through federal legislation appear to be stymied, as most lawmakers seem to agree the boy should go back to Cuba. A new ABC News-Washington Post opinion poll shows that 6 of 10 Americans also believe the boy should (go) home with his father.
Verb: go
No
His car was spotted in Slepian's suburban Amherst neighborhood in the weeks before the shooting, and was found abandoned at New Jersey's Newark International Airport in December, investigators said. Kopp's stepmother, who married Kopp's father when Kopp was in his 30s, said Thursday from her home in Irving, Texas : I would like to see him (come) forward and clear his name if he's not guilty, and if he's guilty, to contact a priest and make his amends with society, face what he did.
Verb: come
No
It brings it home. D'Amato's aides would not (comment) about the political ramifications of the slaying, and Schumer's aides would not talk about whether they planned to refer to it in any advertisements, or whether the candidate planned to use it on the campaign trail.
Verb: comment
|
No
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a definition of a task first, then an example. Follow the example to solve a new instance of the task.
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Why? This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
New input: Bin Laden, who is accused of masterminding the attack, is on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List. A $5 million reward has been (offered) for his capture.
Verb: offered
Solution:
|
Yes
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example input: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example output: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: Slepian, 52, was shot with a rifle. Authorities have said they believe the weapon may have been buried in advance of the shooting, with the killer digging it up to fire the shot, then reburying it and (fleeing).
Verb: fleeing
A:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example Input: My family is a very close family, she said. Another cousin, Georgina Cid, (said) Elian's father had intended to flee Cuba himself, but was being coerced by the Castro government to stay and make certain statements.
Verb: said
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: Kopp, 44, of St. Albans, Vt., became the subject of an international manhunt in November when he was called a witness in the case. He was charged Thursday in state and federal complaints with second-degree murder and with (violating) the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act by using deadly force against an abortion doctor.
Verb: violating
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: WELLINGTON, New Zealand ( AP ) _ The United States had the right to defend its citizens against terrorist actions, New Zealand (said) Friday in response to U.S. missile attacks on alleged terrorist sites in Sudan and Afghanistan.
Verb: said
Example Output:
|
Yes
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
One example is below.
Q: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
A: No
Rationale: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: Burton is an outspoken critic of the Castro regime. A 1996 law named for him and Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., (strengthened) the 1959 trade embargo against Cuba.
Verb: strengthened
A:
|
Yes
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[EX Q]: She is not certain whether the boy should stay in the United States, but she feels that since he's been here so long, he should be afforded the opportunity to live in a free country. When asked if she (thought) the boy's father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, was being controlled by the Cuban government even though he has been in Bethesda, Md., for the last week, she frowned.
Verb: thought
[EX A]: No
[EX Q]: He also is wanted in connection with the shooting of doctors in Winnipeg, Vancouver and Rochester, New York. Slepian was (killed) by a single gunshot fired from a wooded area through a window of his home.
Verb: killed
[EX A]: Yes
[EX Q]: Even miles away from sign-waving demonstrators who keep vigil outside the tiny house in Little Havana where Elian Gonzalez lives with his great-uncle, talk about the standoff between Elian's Miami relatives and Immigration and Naturalization Service officials pours hot and quick from coffee stands on Calle Ocho and any other place Cuban Americans gather. In rapid-fire Spanish, so fast that even people who learned the language in other Hispanic cultures can have trouble keeping up, they villify Attorney General Janet Reno, President Clinton and others who (want) to send the child back to his father in Cuba.
Verb: want
[EX A]:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example Input: Among non-Cuban Americans, there was a drastic shift in their feelings on the case. (Send) him back, said Marsha Raeber, 47, an airline employee.
Verb: Send
Example Output: No
Example Input: NAIROBI, Kenya ( AP ) _ U.S. Ambassador Prudence Bushnell (wrapped) up some unfinished business on Wednesday, meeting with Kenya's trade minister to finish talks that were interrupted by the car bombing of the embassy.
Verb: wrapped
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: But an INS spokeswoman said the agency would revoke Elian's permission to stay in the United States, clearing the way for his return to Cuba. In Havana, Cuban President Fidel Castro said that the boy's father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, would travel to the United States to bring his son home after the custody battle has been (decided) in the courts.
Verb: decided
Example Output:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Input: Consider Input: The standard $50,000 reward for information leading to a listed fugitive's capture comes on top of a $500,000 reward announced earlier by Attorney General Janet Reno, plus a $100,000 award offered previously by the FBI. Reno said Bin Laden and Kopp have one thing in common : Each wrongly (believes) he is justified in using all means possible to achieve his goal.
Verb: believes
Output: Yes
Input: Consider Input: " I cannot detail or characterize the type of evidence we have gathered in Nairobi. " He said he cannot (confirm) there is any evidence linking the bomb blasts at the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania to the Saudi millionaire and the allegedly main sponsor of anti-U.S. terrorism, Osama Bin Laden, who now lives in Afghanistan.
Verb: confirm
Output: No
Input: Consider Input: Burton is an outspoken critic of the Castro regime. A 1996 law named for him and Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., (strengthened) the 1959 trade embargo against Cuba.
Verb: strengthened
|
Output: Yes
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
The search for Kopp was recently extended to Mexico. Meantime, FBI agents and Metropolitan Police officers (assigned) to a joint terrorism task force here scanned the crowd of anti-abortion protesters at the annual March for Life on Capitol Hill, because Kopp has been either a participant in or arrested at this march in each of the last three years, according to another law enforcement official,
Verb: assigned
Yes
Slepian was killed on Oct. 23, 1999 by a sniper hiding in his backyard. Earlier that day, the Slepian family sent a fax to local police explaining that abortion providers were warned that one of them might be (targeted) for assassination.
Verb: targeted
No
No enforcement action was ever announced by the INS, he said. Alarcon, former Cuban ambassador to the United Nations, dismissed suggestions by some U.S. politicians and Elian's relatives in Miami that Elian's father travel from Cardenas, Cuba, to Miami to (pick) up the boy.
Verb: pick
|
Yes
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example Input: Slepian was the mainstay of Buffalo's only abortion clinic before he was shot to death last Oct. 23 at his home in suburban Amherst. But the decision by District Attorney Frank C. Clark to (begin) presenting evidence to a state grand jury suggests that he has amassed enough material to support a criminal indictment for homicide.
Verb: begin
Example Output: No
Example Input: It offered more details and criticisms of the perceived treatment that Elian's grandmothers, Mariela Quintana and Raquel Rodriguez, received from O'Laughlin, the Miami relatives and other anti-Castro Cubans during the encounter. In an interview with the Spanish language broadcast of CNN, Elian's father also (criticized) how the meeting was handled.
Verb: criticized
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: For the people of Poland, high noon comes today. The Czech foreign minister, Jan Kavan, who lived in London from 1968, when the Soviets invaded Czechoslovakia, until 1989, said he had remained buoyant during his opposition work as an emigre by believing that communism would eventually (fall).
Verb: fall
Example Output:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: Investigators have been searching for Kopp since shortly after the Oct. 23 slaying. Up until Thursday, however, they had described him only as a material witness (wanted) for questioning -- not a suspect.
Verb: wanted
SOLUTION: Yes
PROBLEM: If and when the relatives' appeal goes to federal court, chances of a favorable ruling are slim. First of all, the INS already has taken the position the only person who can (petition) for U.S. asylum for Elian is his father, which he is not about to do.
Verb: petition
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: The group would be ready to leave for the United States as soon as Tuesday, Castro said. Gonzalez said he would go (get) his son alone if U.S. authorities promised they would turn Elian over to him immediately and allow them to fly back to Cuba right away, Castro said Sunday.
Verb: get
SOLUTION:
|
No
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a definition of a task first, then an example. Follow the example to solve a new instance of the task.
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Why? This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
New input: Since then, 427 fugitives have been taken into custody or located, 133 of them as a result of citizen assistance, the FBI said. A total of $650,000 is being (offered) in the United States for information leading to Kopp's arrest.
Verb: offered
Solution:
|
Yes
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example Input: Like the family, we are monitoring developments concerning the possible arrival of ( Elian's father ) Juan Miguel Gonzalez in the United States, said Robert Wallis, INS director for the Miami district. Government officials had threatened to (revoke) the boy's parole if his great-uncle, Lazaro Gonzalez, did not sign a document agreeing to hand Elian over to federal officials once the family's appeal in the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was decided.
Verb: revoke
Example Output: No
Example Input: Bushnell continued with her duties throughout the subsequent search and rescue at the blast scene, memorials for those slain, and the relocation to a temporary embassy. Kimotho, who was (hospitalized) with a head wound, said he and Bushnell had been talking about the slated visit of U.S. Commerce Secretary William Daley in September.
Verb: hospitalized
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: That course would be psychologically wounding to the boy, and could lead to a violent confrontation with demonstrators who gather daily outside the relatives' home. The government yields none of its legal or moral authority in the case if it gives the relatives and their supporters time to reflect and to (look) for a gentler resolution.
Verb: look
Example Output:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Teacher: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Teacher: Now, understand the problem? If you are still confused, see the following example:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Reason: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this instance: He has been arrested more than a dozen times during abortion protests in seven states and Italy. The FBI (says) Kopp has used 29 aliases.
Verb: says
Student:
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Yes
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
--------
Question: Retaliating 13 days after the deadly embassy bombings in East Africa, U.S. forces Thursday launched cruise missile strikes against alleged terrorist camps in Afghanistan and a chemical plant in Sudan. Countries have the right to defend themselves and their citizens against terrorism and New Zealand appreciates and understands the steps the United States has taken, McKinnon (said).
Verb: said
Answer: Yes
Question: Since the tragedy, Elian has become a political poster boy for Cubans with diametrically opposed ideologies living on both sides of the Florida Straits. During his speech Wednesday night, Castro expressed irritation that much of the rest of the delegation was not granted visas to travel to the United States to (stay) with Elian while waiting out a federal appeal filed by Elian's Miami relatives and assist in his rehabilitation.
Verb: stay
Answer: No
Question: Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev says the push east signifies a rejection of the common European security system that was discussed at the end of the Cold War. Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov (calls) extending NATO membership into Eastern Europe a movement in the wrong direction.
Verb: calls
Answer:
|
Yes
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Let me give you an example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
The answer to this example can be: No
Here is why: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
OK. solve this:
It is the largest reward the government has ever offered for a fugitive. A total of $650,000, meanwhile, is being offered for information leading to the arrest of Kopp, who is charged with gunning down Dr. Barnett Slepian last fall in his home in Buffalo, N.Y. Slepian (provided) legal abortions in western New York state.
Verb: provided
Answer:
|
Yes
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: In her speech, in the small auditorium where dignitaries from the three countries sat and the three foreign ministers flanked her on the stage, Albright countered that NATO would now do for Europe's East what NATO has already helped to do for Europe's West. Steadily and systematically, we will continue erasing _ without (replacing) _ the line drawn in Europe by Stalin's bloody boot.
Verb: replacing
|
Solution: No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: About 500 people attended a Sunday night memorial service for the Buffalo-area physician who performed abortions, one year after he was killed by a sniper's bullet. A nurse who was critically (injured) in the 1998 abortion clinic bombing in Birmingham, Ala., was among those who attended the interfaith ceremony at a Presbyterian church for Dr. Barnett Slepian.
Verb: injured
SOLUTION: Yes
PROBLEM: Clinton ordered an assessment of what it would cost to rebuild the embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and the price tag for emergency response teams sent to the two countries. He also asked for a " list of the priorities for (improving) security for U.S. facilities around the world. "
Verb: improving
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: We want to build on the long-term partnership that has existed between our countries to help innocent Kenyans who suffered in the bombing, Satcher said at a news conference. At the same time, we want to (help) Kenya prepare to meet future medical disasters, regardless of their cause.
Verb: help
SOLUTION:
|
No
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
--------
Question: White heads a team that is investigating and prosecuting the bombings which killed 224 people, including 12 Americans, on Aug. 7, 1998. Mohamed, 24, allegedly (rented) a house in his native Tanzania which was used as a bomb factory.
Verb: rented
Answer: Yes
Question: The measure made it a Federal crime to attack or blockade an abortion clinic. Now, Ms. Conlin said, it will (have) new resonance, and the organization is considering buying more air time.
Verb: have
Answer: No
Question: Elian's paternal great-uncle, Lazaro Gonzalez, is fighting to keep the boy with him in Miami, saying he can give the child a better life outside Cuba. He and others who (oppose) the boy's return to Cuba say that Elian's mother died to give the boy freedom in the United States.
Verb: oppose
Answer:
|
Yes
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Hungarian head of state Arpad Goencz signed Budapest's accession document on February 10. U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has invited Polish Foreign Minister Bronisaw Geremek to (visit) the United States.
Verb: visit
|
Solution: No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
On Aug. 7, Bushnell, Trade Minister Joseph Kimotho and others had just ended a news conference in a building adjacent to the embassy. They were (talking) when the bomb went off, killing 247 people and wounding more than 5,000 others.
Verb: talking
answer:
Yes
question:
Pathway Communications, which has maintained the site, said in a statement that The Nuremberg Files was knocked off-line without notice. The company (said) it was informed Friday that it violated MindSpring's policy on threatening and harassing language.
Verb: said
answer:
Yes
question:
The boy's father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, lives in Cuba and wants Elian back. But Elian's relatives in Miami have (fought) to keep the boy, saying they could provide him with a better life.
Verb: fought
answer:
|
Yes
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
--------
Question: The Web site included the names and addresses of abortion doctors and featured photos of mangled fetuses and drawings of dripping blood. Three times, doctors whose names appeared on the list were (killed), most recently last October when Dr. Barnett Slepian was gunned down by sniper fire in his home outside Buffalo, N.Y. His name on the Web site was crossed out that same day.
Verb: killed
Answer: Yes
Question: If the father shows up in Miami and decides to go and ring the doorbell of his relatives and find his son, well, the family in Miami is on record as saying they would turn over Elian to him. Whether they actually do this remains to be (seen).
Verb: seen
Answer: No
Question: It is the largest reward the government has ever offered for a fugitive. A total of $650,000, meanwhile, is being offered for information leading to the arrest of Kopp, who is charged with gunning down Dr. Barnett Slepian last fall in his home in Buffalo, N.Y. Slepian (provided) legal abortions in western New York state.
Verb: provided
Answer:
|
Yes
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Ex Input:
Reno said she is considering the issues raised in the meeting and the state court action. I plan to respond as quickly as possible, she (said) in a statement.
Verb: said
Ex Output:
Yes
Ex Input:
The New York Times said in an editorial on Thursday, April 6 : Juan Miguel Gonzalez has made the right decision to travel to the United States on Thursday to (affirm) his desire to be reunited with his son, Elian.
Verb: affirm
Ex Output:
No
Ex Input:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to invite the three eastern European countries to (start) accession talks.
Verb: start
Ex Output:
|
No
| 1
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Detailed Instructions: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
See one example below:
Problem: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Slepian was among those who took a stand against restricting reproductive freedom and paid with his life. Unless these brave doctors are better (protected), fewer doctors in the next generation will be willing to place themselves and their families in such danger.
Verb: protected
Solution:
|
No
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Q: It brings it home. D'Amato's aides would not (comment) about the political ramifications of the slaying, and Schumer's aides would not talk about whether they planned to refer to it in any advertisements, or whether the candidate planned to use it on the campaign trail.
Verb: comment
A: No
****
Q: We have the perfect formula for reinserting Elian, Castro said. He also said that the group would be willing to (wait) as long as it takes to bring the boy back.
Verb: wait
A: No
****
Q: We cannot stop mobilizing ! The struggle must not (stop) for one minute ! said a message that was read Wednesday night to several thousand rallying Cuban scientists.
Verb: stop
A:
|
No
****
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[EX Q]: NAIROBI, Kenya ( AP ) _ Terrorist bombings at U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania blew apart buildings and buses, (trapping) people under slabs of concrete and twisted steel that rescuers cleared with cranes, blow torches and bare hands.
Verb: trapping
[EX A]: Yes
[EX Q]: The boy's father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, lives in Cuba and wants him back. But Elian's relatives in Miami have fought to keep the boy permanently, saying they could (provide) him with a better life than he would have on the communist island.
Verb: provide
[EX A]: No
[EX Q]: Juan Miguel Gonzalez has made the right decision to travel to the United States on Thursday to affirm his desire to be reunited with his son, Elian. His presence on American soil is necessary to dispel doubts about his fitness as a father _ raised maliciously by Elian's Miami relatives _ and to (end) speculation that he is indifferent about reclaiming custody of his son.
Verb: end
[EX A]:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[Q]: In Havana, Elian's father joined President Fidel Castro on Thursday in a packed auditorium in what has become a daily public rally to press for the boy's return. Speaker after speaker denounced the United States and (extolled) the virtues of Cuba's communist revolution.
Verb: extolled
[A]: Yes
[Q]: Albright told the foreign minister the American people share in the profound sorrow of the Tanzanians and said the United States will maintain its presence throughout Africa and throughout the world. These bombings will not cause America to back down or (retreat), she declared.
Verb: retreat
[A]: No
[Q]: The 14 foreigners, six Iraqis, six Sudanese, a Somali national and a Turk, were rounded up because they failed to explain their presence in the country satisfactorily. Albright announced on Monday to (offer) a reward of up to 2 million U.S. dollars for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the bombers.
Verb: offer
[A]:
|
No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Teacher: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Teacher: Now, understand the problem? If you are still confused, see the following example:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Reason: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this instance: Castro called Munero -- who reportedly drove a taxi and engaged in unofficial businesses in the Cuban city of Cardenas -- a ruffian on whom Cuban police had amassed 100 pages of reports. According to sources (quoted) by the Miami Herald, Munero had fled to Florida in June 1998 and returned to Cuba later that year, only to be jailed for several months.
Verb: quoted
Student:
|
Yes
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
One example is below.
Q: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
A: No
Rationale: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: It's very scary. Sunday's yahrtzeit service ---- a Jewish ceremony that commemorates the dead with the lighting of a 24-hour candle ---- included the lighting of candles for the seven people killed and 12 people (injured) in abortion-related violence since 1993.
Verb: injured
A:
|
Yes
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
But the great-uncle of 6-year-old shipwreck survivor rafter Elian Gonzalez only ducked his head and walked faster. In a drama that has divided his once close-knit family and may finally be (resolved) in a court hearing the week of March 6, Manuel Gonzalez, 59, a soft-spoken bus mechanic, has remained largely out of the glare of television lights.
Verb: resolved
No
The Justice Department wants the appeals court to suspend the temporary injunction issued Thursday and also order Elian's great-uncle, Lazaro Gonzalez, to release the boy. The relatives want the court to let them meet with Elian's father without being (required) to surrender the boy.
Verb: required
No
Since then, 427 fugitives have been taken into custody or located, 133 of them as a result of citizen assistance, the FBI said. Six suspects in the Bin Laden investigation are known to (be) in custody in the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York.
Verb: be
|
Yes
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Detailed Instructions: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
See one example below:
Problem: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Speaker after speaker denounced the United States and extolled the virtues of Cuba's communist revolution. A Justice official, who (requested) anonymity, said the department has authority, if necessary, to shift temporary custody to someone other than Lazaro Gonzalez.
Verb: requested
Solution:
|
Yes
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Q: The Justice Department is reviewing whether alcohol-related driving violations or other actions by Elian Gonzalez' relatives in Miami warrant moving the 6-year-old boy to a different, temporary custodian. That matter is under review, Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder said when (asked) Thursday about the violations.
Verb: asked
A: Yes
****
Q: WELLINGTON, New Zealand ( AP ) _ The United States had the right to defend its citizens against terrorist actions, New Zealand (said) Friday in response to U.S. missile attacks on alleged terrorist sites in Sudan and Afghanistan.
Verb: said
A: Yes
****
Q: Speaker after speaker denounced the United States and extolled the virtues of Cuba's communist revolution. A Justice official, who (requested) anonymity, said the department has authority, if necessary, to shift temporary custody to someone other than Lazaro Gonzalez.
Verb: requested
A:
|
Yes
****
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
Gonzalez also wrote to Attorney General Janet Reno earlier this week, demanding that Elian be returned to him and saying he does not recognize the courts hearing the custody battle. The Justice Department said it was (reviewing) that letter.
Verb: reviewing
answer:
Yes
question:
( AP ) -- A rifle (found) near the home of a slain abortion doctor may yield important clues for investigators trying to track down the gunman.
Verb: found
answer:
Yes
question:
Spencer Eig, an attorney for the Gonzalez family in Miami, said Meissner's assumptions were unconstitutional and untrue. Elian cannot (apply) for asylum from persecution by the Fidel Castro government, Eig complained.
Verb: apply
answer:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[Q]: MIAMI _ Elected officials in and around Miami warned U.S. immigration officials Wednesday that they should expect little help from the police here when they come for 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez, and they said this city could erupt in violence if federal agents (tried) to forcibly take the boy from his great-uncle's house in Little Havana and send him back to Cuba.
Verb: tried
[A]: No
[Q]: According to sources quoted by the Miami Herald, Munero had fled to Florida in June 1998 and returned to Cuba later that year, only to be jailed for several months. The mother was practically kidnapped along with the boy to (make) the late-November trip, Castro said.
Verb: make
[A]: Yes
[Q]: I would go there just for one minute to get him. To (get) him.
Verb: get
[A]:
|
No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a definition of a task first, then an example. Follow the example to solve a new instance of the task.
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Why? This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
New input: Twelve Americans were killed in the Kenya embassy bombing. Clinton ordered an assessment of what it would cost to (rebuild) the embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and the price tag for emergency response teams sent to the two countries.
Verb: rebuild
Solution:
|
No
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[EX Q]: In rapid-fire Spanish, so fast that even people who learned the language in other Hispanic cultures can have trouble keeping up, they villify Attorney General Janet Reno, President Clinton and others who want to send the child back to his father in Cuba. And they question _ or ridicule _ news that the boy's father is (planning) to come here to retrieve his son.
Verb: planning
[EX A]: No
[EX Q]: Terrorist bombings at U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania blew apart buildings and buses, trapping people under slabs of concrete and twisted steel that rescuers cleared with cranes, blow torches and bare hands. At least 82 were (killed) and more than 1,700 injured, officials said as dawn broke Saturday.
Verb: killed
[EX A]: Yes
[EX Q]: Friday, an FBI official said authorities are pursuing more than 400 tips but have not pinned down Kopp's whereabouts. In all candor, the FBI does not know where James Kopp (is) _ period, said Paul Moskal, a spokesman for the bureau's Buffalo office.
Verb: is
[EX A]:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Given the task definition, example input & output, solve the new input case.
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Output: No
This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
New input case for you: And I, at least, will be there to see him off. He said the group would be met on (arriving) in Washington by Craig and Joan Brown Campbell of the National Council of Churches, who traveled with Craig on his lightning trip to Havana on Wednesday.
Verb: arriving
Output:
|
No
| 1
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: About 100 protesters marched in front of the federal building in Orlando on Friday night, waving Cuban and American flags and chanting Cuba libre and long live the USA. Two men carried a banner that said President Clinton, Please (keep) Elian in the United States.
Verb: keep
|
Solution: No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example input: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example output: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: It was during the Truman presidency that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was founded to halt the westward spread of Soviet-led communism. Ironically, NATO's three newest members just a decade ago (were) still under the Soviet umbrella.
Verb: were
A:
|
Yes
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
--------
Question: Albright also used her speech to articulate a forward-looking vision for NATO, which will celebrate its 50th anniversary in Washington next month, and to defend NATO's potential involvement in Kosovo. In the aftermath of the Cold War, she said, NATO must be ready to (face) an aggressive regime, a rampaging faction, or a terrorist group.
Verb: face
Answer: No
Question: MIAMI ( AP ) -- In efforts to (prevent) Elian Gonzalez's return to Cuba, an anti-Castro lawmaker subpoenaed him Friday to testify before a congressional committee and one of his Miami relatives sought to become his legal guardian.
Verb: prevent
Answer: No
Question: In Nairobi, a top Kenyan police official denied a newspaper report that more arrests had been made there. Officials said last week that six people were in custody for (questioning) about the bombing.
Verb: questioning
Answer:
|
Yes
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
One example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution is here: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this: And we know that if, past is prologue, we face a future in which weapons will be more destructive at longer distances than ever before. The NATO summit, she said, would produce an initiative that (responds) to the grave threat posed by weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery.
Verb: responds
Solution:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
( AP ) -- Dr. Barnett Slepian, just back from synagogue, was heating soup in his kitchen last fall when he was (gunned) down with a single shot through a window.
Verb: gunned
Yes
Clark said it was easier to seek extradition of an indicted suspect from another state or a foreign country than of someone wanted as a material witness. For now, though, that would be a theoretical advantage since the authorities have admitted they (have) no idea where Kopp is.
Verb: have
No
Records also show Lazaro Gonzalez's 62-year-old brother, Delfin Gonzalez, has been found guilty at least twice of driving under the influence. On Wednesday, Ricardo Alarcon, head of Cuba's National Assembly and Castro's key man for U.S. - Cuban relations, said the convictions (prove) the homes of those uncles are no place for Elian.
Verb: prove
|
Yes
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Input: Consider Input: Previously, Gonzalez had said he would never come here to get his son. Over the weekend, lawyers for the family raised accusations that Juan Miguel Gonzalez had mistreated his son in telephone conversations, saying he had told the boy that his mother was alive and (waiting) for him in Cuba.
Verb: waiting
Output: No
Input: Consider Input: Rescued on Nov. 25 by fishermen off the Florida coast, Elian has become the subject of an international custody battle. His mother (died) in a boating accident trying to get Elian and herself to the United States.
Verb: died
Output: Yes
Input: Consider Input: Government officials had threatened to revoke the boy's parole if his great-uncle, Lazaro Gonzalez, did not sign a document agreeing to hand Elian over to federal officials once the family's appeal in the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was decided. But that standoff became less important in the eyes of Cuban Americans here after Castro announced Wednesday that the boy's father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, is ready to travel to the United States to (take) his son home.
Verb: take
|
Output: No
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Detailed Instructions: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
See one example below:
Problem: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: We are worried not only about his prolonged kidnapping, Juan Miguel Gonzalez wrote in a letter published on the front page of the Communist Party daily Granma. We (lack) direct information about the concrete conditions to which he is subjected in his daily life.
Verb: lack
Solution:
|
No
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[Q]: Rather than a clash between two governments, the dispute over Elian is a battle between Cubans of differing political views living on both sides of the Florida Straits. Reno allowed the extension of the deadline after (rejecting) a Florida state court order that Elian remain in Miami until March 6 to hear arguments by his American relatives.
Verb: rejecting
[A]: Yes
[Q]: HAVANA ( AP ) -- Elian Gonzalez's father said in a letter published Wednesday that he wants Cuban diplomats based in Washington to (meet) with his 6-year-old son in Miami and check on his condition.
Verb: meet
[A]: No
[Q]: We are worried not only about his prolonged kidnapping, Juan Miguel Gonzalez wrote in a letter published on the front page of the Communist Party daily Granma. We (lack) direct information about the concrete conditions to which he is subjected in his daily life.
Verb: lack
[A]:
|
No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[EX Q]: He has been staying with relatives in Miami who do not want to send him back to Cuba. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service had (ruled) that Elian must be returned to his father, Juan Miguel Gonzalez, and set Friday as the deadline for his repatriation to Cuba.
Verb: ruled
[EX A]: Yes
[EX Q]: WASHINGTON ( AP ) -- Preliminary DNA tests link a missing anti-abortion activist to a strand of hair found near where a sniper shot and killed a Buffalo, N.Y., doctor who performed abortions, a law enforcement official (said) Friday.
Verb: said
[EX A]: Yes
[EX Q]: The bombings at U.S embassies in Kenya and Tanzania have killed more than 200 people, including 12 Americans, and wounded over 5,000. The United States has dispatched FBI agents to Africa to (investigate) the bombings but there was no word in Washington on Tuesday of any significant leads so far.
Verb: investigate
[EX A]:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Teacher: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Teacher: Now, understand the problem? If you are still confused, see the following example:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Reason: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this instance: WARSAW, February 26 ( Xinhua ) -- The presidents of Poland and the Czech Republic have signed papers of accession in simultaneous ceremonies -- broadcast live on Polish television in Warsaw and Prague -- to (become) members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization ( NATO ).
Verb: become
Student:
|
No
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Crew-cut FBI agents fill many of the luxury hotels in the two cities. Western diplomats and intelligence officials say there is no reason to (believe) that terrorists affiliated with Osama bin Laden, the exiled Saudi millionaire who is accused of organizing the Embassy bombings, plan to strike again soon in either country.
Verb: believe
|
Solution: No
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example Input: He placed the blame on Lazaro Rafael Munero, who apparently organized the ill-fated journey on which Elian's mother Elisabeth Brotons and 10 other people -- including Munero -- died. Castro called Munero -- who reportedly drove a taxi and engaged in unofficial businesses in the Cuban city of Cardenas -- a ruffian on whom Cuban police had (amassed) 100 pages of reports.
Verb: amassed
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: Florida state records show Lazaro Gonzalez, 49, was found guilty of driving under the influence of alcohol at least twice from 1991 to 1997. Records also (show) Lazaro Gonzalez's 62-year-old brother, Delfin Gonzalez, has been found guilty at least twice of driving under the influence.
Verb: show
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: Nothing more, she said. Since his sea rescue, Elian has been increasingly (referred) to in Cuba as our son, a boy hero symbolizing the government's decades-long ideological battle with Cuban exiles in Miami.
Verb: referred
Example Output:
|
Yes
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: In its latest deadline, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service has given the Miami relatives until 9 a.m. Tuesday to (sign) a paper promising to turn over the boy to immigration authorities if they lose their federal court appeal.
Verb: sign
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: The suspected car bombings occurred 700 kilometers ( 450 miles ) from each other but just minutes apart on Friday, turning busy streets in two African capitals into bloody piles of concrete and knots of steel. This (appears) to have been a very well-coordinated, very well-planned attack _ clearly not the work of amateurs, U.S. National Security Council spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington.
Verb: appears
SOLUTION: No
PROBLEM: Slepian was killed by a single gunshot fired from a wooded area through a window of his home. Prior to the Slepian's shooting, Kopp had traveled the country and world, authorities (said).
Verb: said
SOLUTION:
|
Yes
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
One example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution is here: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this: The U.S. ambassador to Poland, Dan Fried, who was then on the National Security Council, said Friday that he remembered being asked to help turn this pious wish into a policy. In July 1997, at a summit in Madrid, Spain, the alliance announced it would (accept) Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic.
Verb: accept
Solution:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
One example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution is here: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this: Even before the killing, Schumer was tyring to draw more attention to the anti-abortion record of his opponent, Senator Alfonse D'Amato, a Republican who is also running on the Right to Life Party line. In a New York Times / CBS News poll completed on Saturday, 69 percent of those polled said they did not (know) D'Amato's position on abortion, and only 19 percent knew that he opposed abortion rights.
Verb: know
Solution:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[EX Q]: My family is a very close family, she said. Another cousin, Georgina Cid, said Elian's father had intended to flee Cuba himself, but was being coerced by the Castro government to stay and (make) certain statements.
Verb: make
[EX A]: No
[EX Q]: It offered more details and criticisms of the perceived treatment that Elian's grandmothers, Mariela Quintana and Raquel Rodriguez, received from O'Laughlin, the Miami relatives and other anti-Castro Cubans during the encounter. In an interview with the Spanish language broadcast of CNN, Elian's father also criticized how the meeting was (handled).
Verb: handled
[EX A]: Yes
[EX Q]: She also pledged to ask Congress to approve a still-undetermined amount of emergency funding to pay for re-establishing embassy operations in Tanzania and Kenya and to compensate victims' families. Officials in the two African countries are (counting) on substantial compensation along with assurances of aid for the governments, whose key tourism industries were dealt a blow by the bombings.
Verb: counting
[EX A]:
|
Yes
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Let me give you an example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
The answer to this example can be: No
Here is why: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
OK. solve this:
U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright headed Tuesday to East Africa, seeking to demonstrate American support after the bombings that targeted U.S. embassies, but mostly claimed African lives. To America's embassy personnel in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, I will bring a message of solidarity in their sorrow, admiration for their courage and support for their continued efforts on behalf of our country, Albright said Monday before (leaving) Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland.
Verb: leaving
Answer:
|
Yes
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Input: Consider Input: Kopp, 44, of St. Albans, Vt., became the subject of an international manhunt in November when he was called a witness in the case. He was charged Thursday in state and federal complaints with second-degree murder and with (violating) the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act by using deadly force against an abortion doctor.
Verb: violating
Output: Yes
Input: Consider Input: How it changes things is a little hard to say at this point. If the father shows up in Miami and decides to go and (ring) the doorbell of his relatives and find his son, well, the family in Miami is on record as saying they would turn over Elian to him.
Verb: ring
Output: No
Input: Consider Input: Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev says the push east signifies a rejection of the common European security system that was discussed at the end of the Cold War. Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov calls (extending) NATO membership into Eastern Europe a movement in the wrong direction.
Verb: extending
|
Output: Yes
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
--------
Question: The New York Times said in an editorial on Thursday, April 6 : Juan Miguel Gonzalez has made the right decision to travel to the United States on Thursday to (affirm) his desire to be reunited with his son, Elian.
Verb: affirm
Answer: No
Question: Reno said Bin Laden and Kopp have one thing in common : Each wrongly believes he is justified in using all means possible to achieve his goal. They also (have) in common locations unknown to the authorities.
Verb: have
Answer: Yes
Question: HAVANA ( AP ) -- In an apparent bid to show flexibility in the campaign to return Elian Gonzalez to Cuba, President Fidel Castro said the boy's father has offered to travel alone today to the United States to (pick) up his 6-year-old son.
Verb: pick
Answer:
|
No
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example input: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example output: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: Moskal emphasized that no one has been named as a suspect in Slepian's death. Just the fact that we are interviewing anyone does n't (make) them a subject or a suspect in this, he said.
Verb: make
A:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
Good for Attorney General Janet Reno for the sensible opinion she rendered in the case of Elian Gonzalez. Some semblance of constitutional order was necessary after a Miami judge turned legal logic on its head in an effort to route to her family court his Florida relatives' appeal to (keep) the 6-year-old in the United States.
Verb: keep
answer:
No
question:
The Cuban leader said Elian had been especially loved by his parents because the mother had earlier suffered seven miscarriages. Earlier Friday, Cuba's communist government (celebrated) the birth of independence hero Jose Marti on Friday with rallies calling for the return of Elian Gonzalez, the boy martyr at the center of an international custody battle.
Verb: celebrated
answer:
Yes
question:
Five Iraqis, whose names were not disclosed, also were deported, the newspaper said. It (gave) no reason for the expulsions and Tanzania's criminal investigation and immigration departments could not be reached for comment.
Verb: gave
answer:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
This is child abuse and mistreatment, what they're doing to this boy, Gonzalez said on CBS's 60 Minutes. The way they're abusing him, turning him against his father... he's suffering more here amongst them than he suffered in the sea. Gonzalez said he did n't believe a much-publicized video taped at the relatives' home in which his son said he did n't want to (go).
Verb: go
answer:
No
question:
Many more shipments are expected, but the first batch contained cotton swabs taken at the blast site in hopes of picking up microscopic residues that could positively identify what the bomb was made of. A U.S. official said last week that field tests suggested the presence of a Czech-made plastic explosive called Semtex that has been (used) by terrorist groups before.
Verb: used
answer:
Yes
question:
In hopes of trumping the law, they have unreasonably demanded that a panel of child psychologists determine Elian's fate. The best outcome would be for the relatives to (turn) Elian over to his father as soon as Gonzalez arrives, and to do so in a spirit of kinship that makes the transition as smooth as possible for Elian.
Verb: turn
answer:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Ex Input:
A total of $650,000, meanwhile, is being offered for information leading to the arrest of Kopp, who is charged with gunning down Dr. Barnett Slepian last fall in his home in Buffalo, N.Y. Slepian provided legal abortions in western New York state. The standard $50,000 reward for information leading to a listed fugitive's capture comes on top of a $500,000 reward (announced) earlier by Attorney General Janet Reno, plus a $100,000 award offered previously by the FBI.
Verb: announced
Ex Output:
Yes
Ex Input:
The plan is for him and other members of the delegation to stay in Washington at the homes of Cuban diplomats while awaiting the results of a federal court appeal by Elian's Miami relatives, who have temporary custody of him and are seeking to block his return to Cuba. In another dramatic move, Castro announced that the chief of the Cuban Interests Section in Washington was willing to revoke the diplomatic immunity on his residence, where Cuba has proposed Gonzalez stay with Elian and the rest of his family during the federal appeal -- which could (take) as long as a month or two.
Verb: take
Ex Output:
No
Ex Input:
As talk on the streets swirled, talks between lawyers for Elian's Miami relatives and government officials crept to an uneventful close. U.S. Immigration officials postponed until Tuesday morning any action on revoking the boy's temporary permission to stay in the United States, which would allow federal officials to, ultimately, (take) the boy from his relatives' house and eventually return him to Cuba.
Verb: take
Ex Output:
|
No
| 1
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
One example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution is here: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this: Legal experts and federal officials maintain that Reno can allow the boy to be sent back to Cuba before the appeal is heard. Last week, federal officials sought to have the family must sign an agreement to turn the boy over voluntarily should they (lose) their appeal.
Verb: lose
Solution:
|
No
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Teacher: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Teacher: Now, understand the problem? If you are still confused, see the following example:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Reason: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this instance: President Bill Clinton Thursday condemned terrorist bomb attacks at U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and vowed to find the bombers and bring them to justice. " No matter what it takes, we must (find) those responsible for these evil acts and see that justice is done, " Clinton said at the ceremony marking the return of remains of Americans who were killed in the Kenya embassy bombing.
Verb: find
Student:
|
No
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
instruction:
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
question:
Both charges carry up to life in prison. The federal charge also (carries) a fine of up to $250,000.
Verb: carries
answer:
Yes
question:
HAVANA ( AP ) -- While an important step, the U.S. government decision to return 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez to Cuba does not guarantee that the boy will be (repatriated), the communist leadership warned.
Verb: repatriated
answer:
No
question:
Like the family, we are monitoring developments concerning the possible arrival of ( Elian's father ) Juan Miguel Gonzalez in the United States, said Robert Wallis, INS director for the Miami district. Government officials had threatened to revoke the boy's parole if his great-uncle, Lazaro Gonzalez, did not (sign) a document agreeing to hand Elian over to federal officials once the family's appeal in the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was decided.
Verb: sign
answer:
|
No
| 9
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Q: To the people of Kenya and Tanzania, I will bring a message of friendship, made deeper by our shared grief, and of support in doing all we can to ease their suffering and help them start anew. Albright, after a 16-hour flight, is scheduled to (spend) only five hours on the ground in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, her first stop Tuesday morning, and then about 5 1/2 hours in Nairobi, Kenya, later in the day before returning immediately home.
Verb: spend
A: No
****
Q: Like the family, we are monitoring developments concerning the possible arrival of ( Elian's father ) Juan Miguel Gonzalez in the United States, said Robert Wallis, INS director for the Miami district. Government officials had threatened to (revoke) the boy's parole if his great-uncle, Lazaro Gonzalez, did not sign a document agreeing to hand Elian over to federal officials once the family's appeal in the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was decided.
Verb: revoke
A: No
****
Q: There are many people who tell us that we should give up this fight, said Martin Anorga, an evangelical pastor. But we will (follow) in the path that the Lord has shown us, despite those who want to get in our way.
Verb: follow
A:
|
No
****
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a definition of a task first, then an example. Follow the example to solve a new instance of the task.
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Why? This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
New input: Investigators said Kopp's car was seen in the neighborhood in the days before the slaying. Kopp (vanished) after the shooting, and the car was found abandoned at the Newark, N.J., airport in December.
Verb: vanished
Solution:
|
Yes
| 0
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example input: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example output: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: We need to keep this out of the political process as much as possible. In contrast to Thursday, when two Cuban exile leaders and 133 other people were arrested and police were forced to (use) tear gas to disperse a crowd, protesters in Miami were much calmer Friday.
Verb: use
A:
|
Yes
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Ex Input:
Hundreds of Cuban-Americans chanting Liberty ! Liberty ! (blocked) intersections and cut off access to the Port of Miami.
Verb: blocked
Ex Output:
Yes
Ex Input:
We have the perfect formula for reinserting Elian, Castro said. He also said that the group would be willing to wait as long as it takes to (bring) the boy back.
Verb: bring
Ex Output:
No
Ex Input:
Arson and bombings at clinics have become so common that many no longer make the national news. It is bad enough that conservatives in Congress and in state legislatures are working to dismantle reproductive rights by banning certain procedures, such as so-called partial birth abortion, and by requiring waiting periods and parental consent before an abortion can be (obtained).
Verb: obtained
Ex Output:
|
No
| 1
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[EX Q]: But in Miami, Cuban exiles insist the majority of Americans do n't understand the dynamics of life in Cuba. Just how far they are willing to go to prove their point remains to be (seen).
Verb: seen
[EX A]: No
[EX Q]: In rapid-fire Spanish, so fast that even people who learned the language in other Hispanic cultures can have trouble keeping up, they villify Attorney General Janet Reno, President Clinton and others who want to send the child back to his father in Cuba. And they question _ or ridicule _ news that the boy's father is planning to (come) here to retrieve his son.
Verb: come
[EX A]: No
[EX Q]: We need to keep this out of the political process as much as possible. In contrast to Thursday, when two Cuban exile leaders and 133 other people were arrested and police were forced to (use) tear gas to disperse a crowd, protesters in Miami were much calmer Friday.
Verb: use
[EX A]:
|
Yes
| 6
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Teacher: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Teacher: Now, understand the problem? If you are still confused, see the following example:
It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Reason: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Now, solve this instance: If and when the relatives' appeal goes to federal court, chances of a favorable ruling are slim. First of all, the INS already has taken the position the only person who can petition for U.S. asylum for Elian is his father, which he is not about to (do).
Verb: do
Student:
|
No
| 2
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example Input: My family is a very close family, she said. Another cousin, Georgina Cid, said Elian's father had intended to flee Cuba himself, but was being coerced by the Castro government to stay and (make) certain statements.
Verb: make
Example Output: No
Example Input: Reporters also were allowed inside for the first time since the explosion and found broken glass and smashed furniture scattered throughout the embassy. Albright (helped) hang a poster advertising a reward of up to dlrs 2 million for information leading to the bombers' arrest.
Verb: helped
Example Output: Yes
Example Input: Investigators said Kopp's car was seen in the neighborhood in the days before the slaying. Kopp (vanished) after the shooting, and the car was found abandoned at the Newark, N.J., airport in December.
Verb: vanished
Example Output:
|
Yes
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
--------
Question: Since the boy is so young, Meissner said, the natural father has the right to speak for Elian. There is no information that Gonzalez, who was divorced from Elian's mother, is an unfit father, nor that he has been coerced by the Castro regime into (pleading) for his son's return, Meissner said.
Verb: pleading
Answer: No
Question: The best outcome would be for the relatives to turn Elian over to his father as soon as Gonzalez arrives, and to do so in a spirit of kinship that makes the transition as smooth as possible for Elian. Once that happens, Gonzalez and Elian, though technically free to return to Cuba, should remain here to await an appellate court ruling on the case, which is (expected) next month.
Verb: expected
Answer: No
Question: Another man has been arrested in connection with the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania last year that killed 224 people, police said today. I can (confirm) that an individual was arrested in connection with the embassy bombings and the FBI was involved in making the arrest, police spokesman Capt. Rod Beer said.
Verb: confirm
Answer:
|
No
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
Detailed Instructions: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
See one example below:
Problem: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Solution: No
Explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: There were 12 original members of NATO at the time of its founding. Since 1949, it has been (expanded) to include Greece and Turkey in 1952, Germany in 1955 and Spain in 1982.
Verb: expanded
Solution:
|
Yes
| 4
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
--------
Question: Juanita Castro said she has not visited the Miami relatives of Elian Gonzalez and has no plans to do so. Although she supports the cause of Miami's Cubans in their struggle against her brother's government, she said she prefers to (keep) a low profile when it comes to politics.
Verb: keep
Answer: No
Question: It was unclear if American authorities would give the Cubans the 28 visas they have proposed. The group would not leave until Gonzalez had assurances that American authorities would (give) him custody of his son.
Verb: give
Answer: No
Question: If and when the relatives' appeal goes to federal court, chances of a favorable ruling are slim. First of all, the INS already has taken the position the only person who can petition for U.S. asylum for Elian is his father, which he is not about to (do).
Verb: do
Answer:
|
No
| 7
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example input: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example output: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Q: He's being manipulated totally by Fidel Castro. He's not (telling) the truth.
Verb: telling
A:
|
No
| 3
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
TASK DEFINITION: You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
PROBLEM: Anti-abortion protester James Kopp is being sought as a material witness in the shooting. Investigators said Kopp's car was (seen) in the neighborhood in the days before the slaying.
Verb: seen
SOLUTION: Yes
PROBLEM: I am the father. Elian was found Thanksgiving Day (clinging) to an inner tube at sea after his mother, stepfather and eight other people drowned while trying to reach Florida by boat.
Verb: clinging
SOLUTION: Yes
PROBLEM: With a tense Miami waiting, federal immigration officials said Monday they will order the Miami relatives of 6-year-old Cuban rafter Elian Gonzalez to turn the boy over to his father, who could come to the U.S. from Cuba as early as Tuesday. Our goal is to (reunite) Elian and his father, said Maria Cardona, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
Verb: reunite
SOLUTION:
|
No
| 8
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Juan Miguel Gonzalez said during a news conference in his hometown of Cardenas. I am the father of Elian and immigration has (said) that I am the only one who can speak for him
Verb: said
|
Solution: Yes
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
Example: It was followed by Denmark, Norway, Germany, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Spain, Britain, the United States, Iceland, Belgium, Italy, Portugal and Turkey. NATO decided at last year's Madrid summit to (invite) the three eastern European countries to start accession talks.
Verb: invite
Example solution: No
Example explanation: This is a good example. The "invite" is not anchorable. Although NATO decided to invite them, they haven't invited them yet, and it's not guaranteed to happen in the future. They might change their decision later.
Problem: Kopp vanished after the shooting, and the car was found abandoned at the Newark, N.J., airport in December. Officials said DNA test results showed a likelihood that a strand of hair (discovered) behind Slepian's home came from Kopp.
Verb: discovered
|
Solution: Yes
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
You will be given a context and a verb separated with a newline character, and you have to answer if the given verb can be anchored in time or not. We say a verb can be anchored in the real timeline if and only if a verb happened in the past, is happening now, or is guaranteed to happen in the future. The output should be "Yes" if the verb can be anchored in time and "No" otherwise.
[Q]: The gun was sent to the FBI laboratory in Washington to determine whether it was used to kill Slepian. If it's not too badly rusted, they may be able to (match) the bullet back to the weapon, said Walter Rowe, forensics sciences professor at George Washington University.
Verb: match
[A]: No
[Q]: The Immigration and Naturalization Service has ruled in favor of the father's request that the boy be returned to him in Cuba, but that decision was put on hold while the Miami relatives battle in federal court to keep him in this country. Holder (said) that INS acted appropriately but now that we have this new information, we'll have to look at it, and see, like I said, what steps if any are appropriate.
Verb: said
[A]: Yes
[Q]: While state-run television broadcast footage of Cuban exiles protesting in Miami against the repatriation of Elian Gonzalez, the Cuban government urged its people to keep up their own demonstrations to ensure the boy's return. The unusual airing of protests against President Fidel Castro (appeared) aimed at warning Cuban citizens that South Florida exiles could still force the reversal of the U.S. government's decision to return Gonzalez to Cuba.
Verb: appeared
[A]:
|
Yes
| 5
|
NIv2
|
task383_matres_classification
|
fs_opt
|
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