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question:You will be given a definition of a task first, then an example. Follow the example to solve a new instance of the task.In this task, you're given the title of a story consisting of five sentences, numbered 1 through 5. Your job is to arrange the sentences in order to make a story that makes complete sense and is apt for the title. Indicate your answer using the number of the sentences in order, such as '34152'.Title: Marcus Buys Khakis. Sentence 1: All of his clothes were either too formal or too casual. Sentence 2: Marcus needed clothing for a business casual event. Sentence 3: The pair he bought fit him perfectly. Sentence 4: Marcus was happy to have the right clothes for the event. Sentence 5: He decided to buy a pair of khakis.Solution: 21534Why? Marcus's reasons for buying khakis is established, followed by his purchase of them and reaction.New input: Title: Stolen Car. Sentence 1: When he went back to his car it was missing. Sentence 2: He parked in a bad neighborhood. Sentence 3: Tom called the cops and filed a report. Sentence 4: Tim was visiting friends. Sentence 5: Unfortunately the car was never found.Solution:

answer:42135

question:Please answer the following question by reasoning step-by-step. If "A group of people racing on bikes around a track." does that mean that "There are people riding bikes."?Options:- yes- it is not possible to tell- no. Step-by-step reasoning:

answer:One has to be riding a bike to be racing it. So the answer is yes.

question:Problem: Hayat Panwar, 69, deposited the antique jewellery at the Solihull branch of the bank in February 2009.When she arrived at the branch in November 2012 and requested access to it, staff admitted they could not find the box or its contents.NatWest has apologised to Ms Panwar and offered to discuss compensation.She said the box contained antique jewellery and other items passed down through her family, which she said were irreplaceable.Ms Panwar said the items included her wedding and engagement rings, along with her father's watch and jewellery she inherited from her parents and grandparents, all of whom are no longer alive.Many of them were handed to her on her wedding day."I just cried, I broke down," she said."Since then I've been on medication, I haven't been the same, I wake up in the night, thinking about it."It's affected my life and I don't know what to do."NatWest said it was doing all it could to locate the box.In a statement, the bank said: "In addition, we have made a request for information from Mrs Panwar as to the contents of the safety custody box, in order to discuss compensation to go some way to make amends for the loss she has experienced."The financial ombudsman said there were between 50 and 60 complaints a year about deposit boxes.The main themes tend to be disputes about the contents and complaints about damage.Ms Panwar said the heirlooms were "priceless" and promises of compensation were of little comfort."I just want my gold back; I don't feel myself and I don't think I'd feel the same even if I got the money," she said."It's part of my mum and dad and that's what I want back. I would love to give a piece to my children and grandchildren."What was that article about?A: NatWest bank has lost a pensioner's safety deposit box which she said contained heirlooms worth more than £20,000.Crusaders, who are seven points clear at the Premiership summit, make the trip to Dungannon Swifts while the Blues host bottom club Portadown."Linfield have been excellent, they are working hard and are chasing us down," said Baxter."There is a big run in to the finishing line and we'll see who is stronger."He added: "Being seven points clear is a nice position to be in and we've worked very hard since the start of the year."We've led from the start of the season and that's a hard place to be because everyone is coming after you."Linfield followed up their Co Antrim Shield final success over the Crues with a 2-0 away win over struggling Carrick Rangers last Saturday.The Blues will be expected to pick up three points against a Ports side sitting 12 points adrift at the basement."We've been on a good run and it is vital that we keep the momentum going," said Linfield manager David Healy."But the Ports are fighting for their lives and just like Carrick we expect another tough test on Friday night."Third-placed Cliftonville saw their faint title hopes suffer a massive blow last weekend with a 1-0 defeat at Ballinamallard.Reds defender Chris Ramsey was sent-off at Ferney Park and he is suspended for the Solitude clash with Glentoran.The Mallards will hope to build on the surprise win over Cliftonville when they take on Glenavon at Mourneview Park.Sum: Crusaders boss Stephen Baxter is wary of the threat posed by Linfield as the top two continue their title tussle with games on Friday night.Q: Ibrahim Halawa was 17 when he was arrested during a siege on the Al-Fath mosque in Cairo in 2013.The Egyptian ambassador will be called to appear before the parliament's foreign affairs committee to receive a request for Mr Halawa's release.He faces a possible death sentence.Violent clashesMr Halawa's family have said he had taken refuge in the mosque during violent clashes between supporters of ousted president Mohammed Morsi and the security forces.The son of Ireland's most senior Muslim cleric, Mr Halawa, from Firhouse in Dublin, has spent more than 1,000 days in prison.An Irish parliamentary delegation will be established to visit the Egyptian parliament and seek to arrange a visit to Mr Halawa.A: Both houses of the Irish parliament are to pass cross-party motions protesting against the detention without trial of an Irishman in Egypt.Text: A £11.3m investment will see the creation of three new data hubs in Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow.The hubs will analyse a range of online data, such as customer behaviour or production patterns, which firms can then use to boost productivity.Backers of the plan expect the new labs to play an important part in Scotland's growing digital sector.Up to 345 jobs are expected to be created.The Data Lab, the firm behind the new investment, said part of the aim is to try to build better working relationships and understandings between themselves and the firms who are generating the data.Neil Logan, chairman of The Data Lab, said: "Any organisation can benefit from this. We are going to look to fund over 1000 collaborative, innovation projects between industry public services and their academics."Data science is the fundamental skill which helps businesses unlock the value of the data they have. The jobs that we are looking at are highly skilled and highly paid."The investment is expected to bring an additional £155m to the Scottish economy but Mr Logan claimed this could increase dramatically in the future.He said: "The Centre for Economics and Business Research estimated that 'Big Data' as an area would be worth around £216bn between 2012 and 2017 (in the UK). If we look at Scotland as 10% of that we could be looking at £20bn."The new lab is being funded by the Scottish Funding Council, Scottish Enterprise and Highlands and Islands Enterprise.Laurence Howells, Chief Executive of the Scottish Funding Council, said: "Tablets, kindles, mobile phones, online shopping; we all use and generate massive amounts of data each day."Our £11.3 million investment will support The Data Lab to develop innovative techniques that will improve many aspects of our lives, from efficient energy use, personalised online shopping, through to faster and more effective medical care."summary: Hundreds of Scottish jobs have been promised with the creation of a new "Big Data" centre.Text: The RSPCA was called after a member of the public heard the six-month-old animal "screaming in pain" in Ardingly Road, Saltdean, East Sussex on Sunday.Officers alerted fire crews, who spent an hour knocking down part of the garage wall in the early hours."There was no way he was getting out by himself," said RSPCA inspector Marie Steven."It was touch-and-go whether this little animal was going to survive this mishap, due to how severely he was wedged into that tiny space."He was completely pinned by his head, shoulders and hips," she added."The fire and rescue team from Rottingdean did a fantastic job. They spent more than an hour bashing through the garage wall to reach him unscathed. They had to remove bits of concrete, as the fox couldn't be reached at all."I was so relieved when we got to him and found him uninjured. We checked him over, and gave him some food and water, and were then able to release him back into the wild to live another day, seemingly unperturbed by the whole middle-of-the-night adventure."summary:

answer:Rescuers demolished part of a wall to free a fox cub trapped in a three-inch gap between a garage and a house.

question:Translate from Hindi to English such that it preserves the original meaning Perform complete translation (partially translated sentences are considered incorrect).Input: Consider Input: तुम मूर्ख हो.Output: You're just stupid.Input: Consider Input: पूरी मजदूरी, एरिक.Output: All your wages, Erik.Input: Consider Input: मैं भी उतना ही दोषी होउंगा इस काले धन का जितना आप .

answer:Output: I'd be as indictable as you for laundering money?

question:Detailed Instructions: "Yes, and" is a rule-of-thumb in improvisational comedy that suggests that a participant in a dialogue should accept what another participant has stated ("Yes") and then expand on that line of thought or context ("and..."). Given a prompt and two responses, identify which response is the type of "yes, and". Indicate your answer by 'Response 1' if the first response is correct, otherwise 'Response 2'. Note that a "Yes, and" does not require someone explicitly saying 'yes, and...' as part of a dialogue exchange.Problem:Prompt: Yeah but I was just wondering if you could, like, maybe write a letter to my dad just saying that I turned in all my work and that I'm probably the smartest girl in the class. Response 1: Lisa, guess what? You graduated. I'm skipping you ahead. Response 2: He's pacing a lot, he's not making eye contact, he's not threatening. I get it.Solution:

answer:Response 1

question:Instructions: In this task, you're given context and an answer. Your task is to generate the question for this answer based on the given context with commonsense reasoning about social situations..Input: Context: Sasha was running late for school. Sasha ran a stop sign. Answer: carelessOutput:

answer:How would you describe Sasha?

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