Skip to content
🤔prompts chat🧠
🔍
question:Article: On a hot summer day, ice-cold watermelons serve up a delicious treat. Sure, the rosy flesh quenches your thirst . But now there are more reasons than ever for people to reach for a slice of watermelon. Meet Dr Alison Edwards. She is a scientist at the Agricultural Research Service. Scientists are people who come up with new ideas called theories . They usually do scientific research to test their new theories. That's how they find out if a new idea is a good one, or if the new idea will bring an even better idea. At her lab, Dr Edwards recently learned more about the secrets of why watermelons are good for you! Dr Edwards has known for a long time that watermelons have vitamin C. But recently she learned that watermelons also have lycopene . It is something that gives tomatoes and watermelons their rosy red colour. What's so special about the lycopene in watermelons? Dr Edwards says that watermelons and tomatoes both have lots of lycopene. It seems that your body can use the lycopene from watermelons more easily than the lycopene from raw tomatoes. In fact, the lycopene from tomatoes is more easily absorbed inside your body once they have been cooked. Question: Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage? Yes or no, is the answer "Watermelons are good for us in hot summer."? Answer:

answer:Yes, the answer is "Watermelons are good for us in hot summer."

question:Question: Extract the answer to the following question from the movie plot. If the question isn't answerable, please output "Can't answer". Question: Who won the lottery? Title: Waking Ned Devine Movie plot: When word reaches Jackie O'Shea (Ian Bannen) and Michael O'Sullivan (David Kelly), two elderly best friends, that someone in their tiny Irish village of 52 people in Tulaigh Mhór (Tullymore) has won the Irish National Lottery's Lotto game, they, along with Jackie's wife Annie (Fionnula Flanagan), plot to discover the identity of the winner. They obtain a list of lottery customers from Mrs. Kennedy (Maura O'Malley) at the post office, and invite the potential winners to a chicken dinner, where they attempt to get the winner to reveal his or herself. After everyone has left and they are no closer to an answer, Annie realizes that one person did not come to the dinner, so Jackie pays a late-night visit to the only absentee: the reclusive Ned Devine (Jimmy Keogh). He finds Ned in his home in front of the TV, still holding the ticket in his hand, a smile on his face and dead from shock. That same night, Jackie has a dream that the deceased Ned wants to share the winnings with his friends, as he has no family to claim the ticket. Jackie wakes up after the dream, and before dawn, he and Michael return to Ned's house to gather Ned's personal information so they can claim the winnings for themselves. Elsewhere in the village, Maggie O'Toole (Susan Lynch) continues to spurn the romantic interests of her old flame, "Pig" Finn (James Nesbitt), a local pig farmer. Finn is convinced they belong together, as he thinks he is the father of her son Maurice, but she cannot abide him due to his ever present odour of pigs. Finn has a rival in Pat Mulligan (Fintan McKeown), also hoping to marry Maggie. Jackie and Michael call the National Lottery to make the claim, prompting a claim inspector to be sent. The inspector, Mr. Kelly, arrives to find Jackie on the beach and asks him for directions to Ned's cottage. Jackie delays Kelly by taking him on a circuitous route while Michael races to the cottage on a motorcycle, completely naked, and breaks in so he can answer the door as Ned. After discovering that the lottery winnings are... Answer:

answer:Ned Devine won the lottery in the movie "Waking Ned Devine."

question:Q:"Algerites", given a list of categories: company, educational institution, artist, athlete, office holder, mean of transportation, building, natural place, village, animal, plant, album, film or written work, what category does the title belong to? A:

answer:"Algerites" does not fit neatly into any of the provided categories. Given the categories listed and based on the word's structure, it could be a term used to refer to the people from a place, such as the capital city of Algeria, Algiers. It would most closely fit into the "village" or "natural place" categories as a reference to the inhabitants of a location. However, there isn't enough information provided to definitively categorize it under one of the options given without further context.

question:This question has options. Does the word "faith" have the same definition in the next two sentences? They broke faith with their investors. A member of his own faith contradicted him. OPTIONS: a). different meanings. b). the same meaning.

answer:a). different meanings. In the first sentence, "faith" refers to trust and confidence, meaning they betrayed the trust and confidence of their investors. In the second sentence, "faith" refers to a religious belief or set of beliefs, meaning a member from the same religion as the person contradicted him. The word "faith" has different meanings in these two sentences, which is why option a) is correct. Option b) is wrong because "faith" does not have the same meaning in both sentences.

Released under the Anthropic License.

has loaded