text
stringlengths 21
12.5k
| id
stringlengths 5
13
| seed
stringclasses 84
values | preceding_context
stringlengths 3
6.12k
| trailing_context
stringlengths 1
6.24k
| matching_sentence
stringlengths 4
7.92k
| correlations
listlengths 1
208
| max_attention_score
float64 0
0.58
| found_at
stringclasses 3
values |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A historical current that arose and flourished during 1890 and 1920 within anarchism was free love. In contemporary anarchism, this current survives as a tendency to support polyamory, relationship anarchy, and queer anarchism. Free love advocates were against marriage, which they saw as a way of men imposing authority over women, largely because marriage law greatly favoured the power of men. The notion of free love was much broader and included a critique of the established order that limited women's sexual freedom and pleasure. | 12_223 | advocates | A historical current that arose and flourished during 1890 and 1920 within anarchism was free love. In contemporary anarchism, this current survives as a tendency to support polyamory, relationship anarchy, and queer anarchism. | The notion of free love was much broader and included a critique of the established order that limited women's sexual freedom and pleasure. | Free love advocates were against marriage, which they saw as a way of men imposing authority over women, largely because marriage law greatly favoured the power of men. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0012971393298357725,
"distance": 12,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 52,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0028856932185590267,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 56,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0016674184007570148,
"distance": 27,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 67,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005093108047731221,
"distance": 47,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 87,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002886 | matching |
Huntsville served as temporary capital from 1819 to 1820, when the seat of government moved to Cahaba in Dallas County. Cahaba, now a ghost town, was the first permanent state capital from 1820 to 1825. The Alabama Fever land rush was underway when the state was admitted to the Union, with settlers and land speculators pouring into the state to take advantage of fertile land suitable for cotton cultivation. Part of the frontier in the 1820s and 1830s, its constitution provided for universal suffrage for white men. | 303_75 | settlers | Huntsville served as temporary capital from 1819 to 1820, when the seat of government moved to Cahaba in Dallas County. Cahaba, now a ghost town, was the first permanent state capital from 1820 to 1825. | Part of the frontier in the 1820s and 1830s, its constitution provided for universal suffrage for white men. | The Alabama Fever land rush was underway when the state was admitted to the Union, with settlers and land speculators pouring into the state to take advantage of fertile land suitable for cotton cultivation. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003683710005134344,
"distance": 37,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 94,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003684 | trailing |
Huntsville served as temporary capital from 1819 to 1820, when the seat of government moved to Cahaba in Dallas County. Cahaba, now a ghost town, was the first permanent state capital from 1820 to 1825. The Alabama Fever land rush was underway when the state was admitted to the Union, with settlers and land speculators pouring into the state to take advantage of fertile land suitable for cotton cultivation. Part of the frontier in the 1820s and 1830s, its constitution provided for universal suffrage for white men. | 303_75 | speculators | Huntsville served as temporary capital from 1819 to 1820, when the seat of government moved to Cahaba in Dallas County. Cahaba, now a ghost town, was the first permanent state capital from 1820 to 1825. | Part of the frontier in the 1820s and 1830s, its constitution provided for universal suffrage for white men. | The Alabama Fever land rush was underway when the state was admitted to the Union, with settlers and land speculators pouring into the state to take advantage of fertile land suitable for cotton cultivation. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002718720119446516,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 94,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 60,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002719 | trailing |
Alsos in Greek means "grove". A number of important commercial port cities of the Greek waters were dedicated to Achilles. Herodotus, Pliny the Elder and Strabo reported on the existence of a town Achílleion (Ἀχίλλειον), built by settlers from Mytilene in the sixth century BC, close to the hero's presumed burial mound in the Troad. Later attestations point to an Achílleion in Messenia (according to Stephanus Byzantinus) and an Achílleios (Ἀχίλλειος) in Laconia. | 305_232 | settlers | Alsos in Greek means "grove". A number of important commercial port cities of the Greek waters were dedicated to Achilles. | Later attestations point to an Achílleion in Messenia (according to Stephanus Byzantinus) and an Achílleios (Ἀχίλλειος) in Laconia. | Herodotus, Pliny the Elder and Strabo reported on the existence of a town Achílleion (Ἀχίλλειον), built by settlers from Mytilene in the sixth century BC, close to the hero's presumed burial mound in the Troad. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005813818424940109,
"distance": 12,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 57,
"gendered_word": "hero",
"word_pos": 45,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005814 | trailing |
Homer does not suggest that Achilles and his close friend Patroclus had sexual relations. Although there is no direct evidence in the text of the Iliad that Achilles and Patroclus were lovers, this theory was expressed by some later authors. Commentators from classical antiquity to the present have often interpreted the relationship through the lens of their own cultures. In 5th-century BC Athens, the intense bond was often viewed in light of the Greek custom of paiderasteia, which is the relationship between an older male and a younger one, usually a teenager. | 305_155 | commentators | Homer does not suggest that Achilles and his close friend Patroclus had sexual relations. Although there is no direct evidence in the text of the Iliad that Achilles and Patroclus were lovers, this theory was expressed by some later authors. | In 5th-century BC Athens, the intense bond was often viewed in light of the Greek custom of paiderasteia, which is the relationship between an older male and a younger one, usually a teenager. | Commentators from classical antiquity to the present have often interpreted the relationship through the lens of their own cultures. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.11666911840438843,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 92,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 43,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.116669 | trailing |
In 5th-century BC Athens, the intense bond was often viewed in light of the Greek custom of paiderasteia, which is the relationship between an older male and a younger one, usually a teenager. In Patroclus and Achilles' case, Achilles would have been the younger as Patroclus is usually seen as his elder. In Plato's Symposium, the participants in a dialogue about love assume that Achilles and Patroclus were a couple; Phaedrus argues that Achilles was the younger and more beautiful one so he was the beloved and Patroclus was the lover. However, ancient Greek had no words to distinguish heterosexual and homosexual, and it was assumed that a man could both desire handsome young men and have sex with women. | 305_158 | participants | In 5th-century BC Athens, the intense bond was often viewed in light of the Greek custom of paiderasteia, which is the relationship between an older male and a younger one, usually a teenager. In Patroclus and Achilles' case, Achilles would have been the younger as Patroclus is usually seen as his elder. | However, ancient Greek had no words to distinguish heterosexual and homosexual, and it was assumed that a man could both desire handsome young men and have sex with women. | In Plato's Symposium, the participants in a dialogue about love assume that Achilles and Patroclus were a couple; Phaedrus argues that Achilles was the younger and more beautiful one so he was the beloved and Patroclus was the lover. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.008370963856577873,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 29,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.012282098643481731,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 123,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0019497498869895935,
"distance": 62,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 129,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.009151425212621689,
"distance": 67,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 134,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.012282 | trailing |
The principals stood in stark contrast both physically and politically. Lincoln warned that Douglas' "Slave Power" was threatening the values of republicanism, and accused Douglas of distorting the Founding Fathers' premise that all men are created equal. Douglas emphasized his Freeport Doctrine, in which he said local settlers were free to choose whether to allow slavery within their territory, and accused Lincoln of having joined the abolitionists. Lincoln's argument assumed a moral tone, as he claimed Douglas represented a conspiracy to promote slavery. | 307_237 | settlers | The principals stood in stark contrast both physically and politically. Lincoln warned that Douglas' "Slave Power" was threatening the values of republicanism, and accused Douglas of distorting the Founding Fathers' premise that all men are created equal. | Lincoln's argument assumed a moral tone, as he claimed Douglas represented a conspiracy to promote slavery. | Douglas emphasized his Freeport Doctrine, in which he said local settlers were free to choose whether to allow slavery within their territory, and accused Lincoln of having joined the abolitionists. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.010963460430502892,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 39,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 55,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.010963 | matching |
As Douglas and the other candidates campaigned, Lincoln gave no speeches, relying on the enthusiasm of the Republican Party. The party did the leg work that produced majorities across the North and produced an abundance of campaign posters, leaflets, and newspaper editorials. Republican speakers focused first on the party platform, and second on Lincoln's life story, emphasizing his childhood poverty. The goal was to demonstrate the power of "free labor", which allowed a common farm boy to work his way to the top by his own efforts. | 307_280 | speakers | As Douglas and the other candidates campaigned, Lincoln gave no speeches, relying on the enthusiasm of the Republican Party. The party did the leg work that produced majorities across the North and produced an abundance of campaign posters, leaflets, and newspaper editorials. | The goal was to demonstrate the power of "free labor", which allowed a common farm boy to work his way to the top by his own efforts. | Republican speakers focused first on the party platform, and second on Lincoln's life story, emphasizing his childhood poverty. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003076725173741579,
"distance": 39,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "boy",
"word_pos": 49,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003077 | trailing |
It is the culmination of the film awards season, which usually begins during November or December of the previous year. This is an elaborate extravaganza, with the invited guests walking up the red carpet in the creations of the most prominent fashion designers of the day. Black tie dress is the most common outfit for men, although fashion may dictate not wearing a bow-tie, and musical performers sometimes do not adhere to this (the artists who recorded the nominees for Best Original Song quite often perform those songs live at the awards ceremony, and the fact that they are performing is often used to promote the television broadcast). The Academy Awards is the world's longest-running awards show televised live from the U.S. to all time zones in North America and worldwide, and gathers billions of viewers elsewhere throughout the world. | 324_176 | performers | It is the culmination of the film awards season, which usually begins during November or December of the previous year. This is an elaborate extravaganza, with the invited guests walking up the red carpet in the creations of the most prominent fashion designers of the day. | The Academy Awards is the world's longest-running awards show televised live from the U.S. to all time zones in North America and worldwide, and gathers billions of viewers elsewhere throughout the world. | Black tie dress is the most common outfit for men, although fashion may dictate not wearing a bow-tie, and musical performers sometimes do not adhere to this (the artists who recorded the nominees for Best Original Song quite often perform those songs live at the awards ceremony, and the fact that they are performing is often used to promote the television broadcast). | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0012332010082900524,
"distance": 15,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 59,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 74,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001233 | matching |
In 2016, in a further effort to streamline speeches, winners' dedications were displayed on an on-screen ticker. During the 2018 ceremony, host Jimmy Kimmel acknowledged how long the ceremony had become, by announcing that he would give a brand-new jet ski to whoever gave the shortest speech of the night (a reward won by Mark Bridges when accepting his Best Costume Design award for Phantom Thread. The Wall Street Journal analyzed the average minutes spent across the 2014–2018 telecasts as follows: 14 on song performances; 25 on the hosts' speeches; 38 on prerecorded clips; and 78 on the awards themselves, broken into 24 on the introduction and announcement, 24 on winners walking to the stage, and 30 on their acceptance speeches. Although still dominant in ratings, the viewership of the Academy Awards has steadily dropped; the 88th Academy Awards were the lowest-rated in the past eight years (although with increases in male and 18–49 viewership), while the show itself also faced mixed reception. | 324_210 | hosts | In 2016, in a further effort to streamline speeches, winners' dedications were displayed on an on-screen ticker. During the 2018 ceremony, host Jimmy Kimmel acknowledged how long the ceremony had become, by announcing that he would give a brand-new jet ski to whoever gave the shortest speech of the night (a reward won by Mark Bridges when accepting his Best Costume Design award for Phantom Thread. | Although still dominant in ratings, the viewership of the Academy Awards has steadily dropped; the 88th Academy Awards were the lowest-rated in the past eight years (although with increases in male and 18–49 viewership), while the show itself also faced mixed reception. | The Wall Street Journal analyzed the average minutes spent across the 2014–2018 telecasts as follows: 14 on song performances; 25 on the hosts' speeches; 38 on prerecorded clips; and 78 on the awards themselves, broken into 24 on the introduction and announcement, 24 on winners walking to the stage, and 30 on their acceptance speeches. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.000028979111448279582,
"distance": 75,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 177,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 102,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000029 | trailing |
After controlling for prior health status, it was determined that volunteerism accounted for a 44% reduction in mortality. Merely being aware of kindness in oneself and others is also associated with greater well-being. A study that asked participants to count each act of kindness they performed for one week significantly enhanced their subjective happiness. While research supports the idea that altruistic acts bring about happiness, it has also been found to work in the opposite direction—that happier people are also kinder. | 336_154 | participants | After controlling for prior health status, it was determined that volunteerism accounted for a 44% reduction in mortality. Merely being aware of kindness in oneself and others is also associated with greater well-being. | While research supports the idea that altruistic acts bring about happiness, it has also been found to work in the opposite direction—that happier people are also kinder. | A study that asked participants to count each act of kindness they performed for one week significantly enhanced their subjective happiness. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.006627177353948355,
"distance": 2,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 45,
"gendered_word": "count",
"word_pos": 43,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006627 | matching |
Public displays such as public weeping for dead celebrities and participation in demonstrations may be influenced by a desire to be seen as generous. People who know that they are publicly monitored sometimes even wastefully donate the money they know is not needed by the recipient because of reputational concerns. Women find altruistic men to be attractive partners. When women look for a long-term partner, altruism may be a trait they prefer as it may indicate that the prospective partner is also willing to share resources with her and her children. | 336_89 | partners | Public displays such as public weeping for dead celebrities and participation in demonstrations may be influenced by a desire to be seen as generous. People who know that they are publicly monitored sometimes even wastefully donate the money they know is not needed by the recipient because of reputational concerns. | When women look for a long-term partner, altruism may be a trait they prefer as it may indicate that the prospective partner is also willing to share resources with her and her children. | Women find altruistic men to be attractive partners. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002286638366058469,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 52,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0033739078789949417,
"distance": 4,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0012589399702847004,
"distance": 3,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003374 | matching |
For an assignment, Rand wrote an essay about the Polish actress Pola Negri; it became her first published work. By this time, she had decided her professional surname for writing would be Rand, and she adopted the first name Ayn (pronounced ). In late 1925, Rand was granted a visa to visit relatives in Chicago. She arrived in New York City on February 19, 1926. | 339_31 | relatives | For an assignment, Rand wrote an essay about the Polish actress Pola Negri; it became her first published work. By this time, she had decided her professional surname for writing would be Rand, and she adopted the first name Ayn (pronounced ). | She arrived in New York City on February 19, 1926. | In late 1925, Rand was granted a visa to visit relatives in Chicago. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.004328373819589615,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "actress",
"word_pos": 60,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004328 | preceding |
This short, also featuring Thomas Meighan and Henri de la Falaise, was produced as a joke, for the April 26, 1925 "Lambs' Gambol" for The Lambs, with the film showing Swanson crashing the all-male club. Following the introduction of the talkies, Dwan directed child-star Shirley Temple in Heidi (1937) and Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938). Dwan helped launch the career of two other successful Hollywood directors, Victor Fleming, who went on to direct The Wizard of Oz and Gone With the Wind, and Marshall Neilan, who became an actor, director, writer and producer. Over a long career spanning almost 50 years, Dwan directed 125 motion pictures, some of which were highly acclaimed, such as the 1949 box office hit, Sands of Iwo Jima. | 344_21 | directors | This short, also featuring Thomas Meighan and Henri de la Falaise, was produced as a joke, for the April 26, 1925 "Lambs' Gambol" for The Lambs, with the film showing Swanson crashing the all-male club. Following the introduction of the talkies, Dwan directed child-star Shirley Temple in Heidi (1937) and Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938). | Over a long career spanning almost 50 years, Dwan directed 125 motion pictures, some of which were highly acclaimed, such as the 1949 box office hit, Sands of Iwo Jima. | Dwan helped launch the career of two other successful Hollywood directors, Victor Fleming, who went on to direct The Wizard of Oz and Gone With the Wind, and Marshall Neilan, who became an actor, director, writer and producer. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0002615754201542586,
"distance": 41,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 43,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 84,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000262 | preceding |
John Galt John Galt is the primary male hero of Atlas Shrugged. He initially appears as an unnamed menial worker for Taggart Transcontinental, who often dines with Eddie Willers in the employees' cafeteria, and leads Eddie to reveal important information about Dagny Taggart and Taggart Transcontinental. Only Eddie's side of their conversations is given in the novel. | 359_15 | employees | John Galt John Galt is the primary male hero of Atlas Shrugged. | Only Eddie's side of their conversations is given in the novel. | He initially appears as an unnamed menial worker for Taggart Transcontinental, who often dines with Eddie Willers in the employees' cafeteria, and leads Eddie to reveal important information about Dagny Taggart and Taggart Transcontinental. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003476809710264206,
"distance": 26,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.003751027164980769,
"distance": 25,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "hero",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003751 | preceding |
Cherryl Brooks is a dime store shopgirl who marries James Taggart after a chance encounter in her store the night the John Galt Line was falsely deemed his greatest success. She marries him thinking he is the heroic person behind Taggart Transcontinental. Cherryl is at first harsh towards Dagny, having believed Jim Taggart's descriptions of his sister, until she questions employees of the railroad. Upon learning that her scorn had been misdirected, Cherryl puts off apologizing to Dagny out of shame, but eventually admits to Dagny that when she married Jim, she thought he had the heroic qualities that she had looked up to - she thought she was marrying someone like Dagny. | 359_91 | employees | Cherryl Brooks is a dime store shopgirl who marries James Taggart after a chance encounter in her store the night the John Galt Line was falsely deemed his greatest success. She marries him thinking he is the heroic person behind Taggart Transcontinental. | Upon learning that her scorn had been misdirected, Cherryl puts off apologizing to Dagny out of shame, but eventually admits to Dagny that when she married Jim, she thought he had the heroic qualities that she had looked up to - she thought she was marrying someone like Dagny. | Cherryl is at first harsh towards Dagny, having believed Jim Taggart's descriptions of his sister, until she questions employees of the railroad. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001553607638925314,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 60,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 65,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001554 | matching |
Eric was a weak, attention-seeking man with a pathological desire to be loved. He committed suicide after the woman he loved married another man. Gerald claims that he always acted for the good of the employees, but he was vain and incompetent and often threw lavish parties using company funds. Ivy, on the other hand, is described as a sadist who relishes seeing others in poverty, but who has no desire for wealth of her own. | 359_223 | employees | Eric was a weak, attention-seeking man with a pathological desire to be loved. He committed suicide after the woman he loved married another man. | Ivy, on the other hand, is described as a sadist who relishes seeing others in poverty, but who has no desire for wealth of her own. | Gerald claims that he always acted for the good of the employees, but he was vain and incompetent and often threw lavish parties using company funds. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002629985101521015,
"distance": 32,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.008615251630544662,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0038085728883743286,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 27,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.008615 | preceding |
I need wider powers." Secondary characters
The following secondary characters also appear in the novel. Hugh Akston is identified as "One of the last great advocates of reason." He was a renowned philosopher and the head of the Department of Philosophy at Patrick Henry University, where he taught Francisco d'Anconia, John Galt, and Ragnar Danneskjöld. He was, along with Robert Stadler, a father figure to these three. | 359_70 | advocates | I need wider powers." Secondary characters
The following secondary characters also appear in the novel. | He was, along with Robert Stadler, a father figure to these three. | Hugh Akston is identified as "One of the last great advocates of reason." He was a renowned philosopher and the head of the Department of Philosophy at Patrick Henry University, where he taught Francisco d'Anconia, John Galt, and Ragnar Danneskjöld. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0008731932612136006,
"distance": 45,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 75,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 30,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000873 | trailing |
He owns the most important steel company in the United States, and invents Rearden Metal, an alloy stronger, lighter, cheaper and tougher than steel. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife Lillian, his brother Philip, and his elderly mother. Rearden represents a type of self-made man and eventually divorces Lillian, abandons his steel mills following a bloody assault by government-planted workers, and joins John Galt's strike. Eddie Willers
Edwin "Eddie" Willers is the Special Assistant to the Vice-President in Charge of Operations at Taggart Transcontinental. | 359_25 | workers | He owns the most important steel company in the United States, and invents Rearden Metal, an alloy stronger, lighter, cheaper and tougher than steel. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife Lillian, his brother Philip, and his elderly mother. | Eddie Willers
Edwin "Eddie" Willers is the Special Assistant to the Vice-President in Charge of Operations at Taggart Transcontinental. | Rearden represents a type of self-made man and eventually divorces Lillian, abandons his steel mills following a bloody assault by government-planted workers, and joins John Galt's strike. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00046383190783672035,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 35,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00030467717442661524,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 39,
"gendered_word": "brother",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005010802997276187,
"distance": 28,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 45,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009228800190612674,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000923 | matching |
Gerald and Ivy Starnes are the two surviving children of Jed Starnes, the founder of the Twentieth Century Motor Company. Together with their since-deceased brother Eric, they instituted a communistic payment-and-benefits program that drove the company into bankruptcy. Gerald, a dying alcoholic, and Ivy, a pseudo-Buddhist ascetic, continue to insist that the plan was perfect and that the failure of their father's company was entirely due to the workers. Eric was a weak, attention-seeking man with a pathological desire to be loved. | 359_220 | workers | Gerald and Ivy Starnes are the two surviving children of Jed Starnes, the founder of the Twentieth Century Motor Company. Together with their since-deceased brother Eric, they instituted a communistic payment-and-benefits program that drove the company into bankruptcy. | Eric was a weak, attention-seeking man with a pathological desire to be loved. | Gerald, a dying alcoholic, and Ivy, a pseudo-Buddhist ascetic, continue to insist that the plan was perfect and that the failure of their father's company was entirely due to the workers. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0006760306423529983,
"distance": 57,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 28,
"gendered_word": "brother",
"word_pos": 85,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013323987368494272,
"distance": 8,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 77,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 85,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0022621615789830685,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 95,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 85,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002262 | trailing |
In his 1766 Alchemical Catechism, Théodore Henri de Tschudi denotes that the usage of the metals was merely symbolic: Psychology
Alchemical symbolism has been important in analytical psychology and was revived and popularized from near extinction by the Swiss psychologist Carl Gustav Jung. Jung was initially confounded and at odds with alchemy and its images but after being given a copy of The Secret of the Golden Flower, a Chinese alchemical text translated by his friend Richard Wilhelm, he discovered a direct correlation or parallel between the symbolic images in the alchemical drawings and the inner, symbolic images coming up in his patients' dreams, visions, or fantasies. He observed these alchemical images occurring during the psychic process of transformation, a process that Jung called "individuation." Specifically, he regarded the conjuring up of images of gold or Lapis as symbolic expressions of the origin and goal of this "process of individuation." Together with his alchemical mystica soror (mystical sister) Jungian Swiss analyst Marie-Louise von Franz, Jung began collecting old alchemical texts, compiled a lexicon of key phrases with cross-references, and pored over them. | 573_341 | patients | In his 1766 Alchemical Catechism, Théodore Henri de Tschudi denotes that the usage of the metals was merely symbolic: Psychology
Alchemical symbolism has been important in analytical psychology and was revived and popularized from near extinction by the Swiss psychologist Carl Gustav Jung. | He observed these alchemical images occurring during the psychic process of transformation, a process that Jung called "individuation." Specifically, he regarded the conjuring up of images of gold or Lapis as symbolic expressions of the origin and goal of this "process of individuation." Together with his alchemical mystica soror (mystical sister) Jungian Swiss analyst Marie-Louise von Franz, Jung began collecting old alchemical texts, compiled a lexicon of key phrases with cross-references, and pored over them. | Jung was initially confounded and at odds with alchemy and its images but after being given a copy of The Secret of the Golden Flower, a Chinese alchemical text translated by his friend Richard Wilhelm, he discovered a direct correlation or parallel between the symbolic images in the alchemical drawings and the inner, symbolic images coming up in his patients' dreams, visions, or fantasies. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.012489382177591324,
"distance": 68,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 177,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 109,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.012489 | trailing |
In this period, the only book of secrets ascribed to a woman was ('The Secrets of Signora Isabella Cortese'). This book contained information on how to turn base metals into gold, medicine, and cosmetics. However, it is rumored that a man, Girolamo Ruscelli, was the real author and only used a female voice to attract female readers. This contributed to a bigger problem in which male authors would credit prominent noblewomen for beauty products with the purpose of appealing to a female audience. | 573_302 | readers | In this period, the only book of secrets ascribed to a woman was ('The Secrets of Signora Isabella Cortese'). This book contained information on how to turn base metals into gold, medicine, and cosmetics. | This contributed to a bigger problem in which male authors would credit prominent noblewomen for beauty products with the purpose of appealing to a female audience. | However, it is rumored that a man, Girolamo Ruscelli, was the real author and only used a female voice to attract female readers. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0008102216525003314,
"distance": 57,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 12,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002958103781566024,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 51,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0026523207779973745,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 64,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.008299916982650757,
"distance": 1,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 68,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004053741227835417,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 79,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0028823711909353733,
"distance": 26,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 95,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.0083 | trailing |
The Radio Shack TRS-80 also used a lone CR to terminate lines. Computers attached to the ARPANET included machines running operating systems such as TOPS-10 and TENEX using CR-LF line endings; machines running operating systems such as Multics using LF line endings; and machines running operating systems such as OS/360 that represented lines as a character count followed by the characters of the line and which used EBCDIC rather than ASCII encoding. The Telnet protocol defined an ASCII "Network Virtual Terminal" (NVT), so that connections between hosts with different line-ending conventions and character sets could be supported by transmitting a standard text format over the network. Telnet used ASCII along with CR-LF line endings, and software using other conventions would translate between the local conventions and the NVT. | 586_140 | hosts | The Radio Shack TRS-80 also used a lone CR to terminate lines. Computers attached to the ARPANET included machines running operating systems such as TOPS-10 and TENEX using CR-LF line endings; machines running operating systems such as Multics using LF line endings; and machines running operating systems such as OS/360 that represented lines as a character count followed by the characters of the line and which used EBCDIC rather than ASCII encoding. | Telnet used ASCII along with CR-LF line endings, and software using other conventions would translate between the local conventions and the NVT. | The Telnet protocol defined an ASCII "Network Virtual Terminal" (NVT), so that connections between hosts with different line-ending conventions and character sets could be supported by transmitting a standard text format over the network. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0001156455182353966,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 61,
"gendered_word": "count",
"word_pos": 97,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000116 | preceding |
Female lovers Love affairs ascribed to Apollo are a late development in Greek mythology. Their vivid anecdotal qualities have made some of them favorites of painters since the Renaissance, the result being that they stand out more prominently in the modern imagination. Daphne was a nymph who scorned Apollo's advances and ran away from him. | 594_794 | painters | Female lovers Love affairs ascribed to Apollo are a late development in Greek mythology. | Daphne was a nymph who scorned Apollo's advances and ran away from him. | Their vivid anecdotal qualities have made some of them favorites of painters since the Renaissance, the result being that they stand out more prominently in the modern imagination. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005811625625938177,
"distance": 26,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 0,
"gendered_word": "Female",
"word_pos": 26,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005812 | preceding |
Homer and Porphyry wrote that Apollo had a hawk as his messenger. In many myths Apollo is transformed into a hawk. In addition, Claudius Aelianus wrote that in Ancient Egypt people believed that hawks were sacred to the god and that according to the ministers of Apollo in Egypt there were certain men called "hawk-keepers" (ἱερακοβοσκοί) who fed and tended the hawks belonging to the god. Eusebius wrote that the second appearance of the moon is held sacred in the city of Apollo in Egypt and that the city's symbol is a man with a hawklike face (Horus). | 594_987 | ministers | Homer and Porphyry wrote that Apollo had a hawk as his messenger. In many myths Apollo is transformed into a hawk. | Eusebius wrote that the second appearance of the moon is held sacred in the city of Apollo in Egypt and that the city's symbol is a man with a hawklike face (Horus). | In addition, Claudius Aelianus wrote that in Ancient Egypt people believed that hawks were sacred to the god and that according to the ministers of Apollo in Egypt there were certain men called "hawk-keepers" (ἱερακοβοσκοί) who fed and tended the hawks belonging to the god. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0012157170567661524,
"distance": 8,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 47,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0018843081779778004,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 103,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 47,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001884 | trailing |
The variant Semito-Hamitic is mostly used in older Russian sources. The elements of the name were derived from the names of two sons of Noah as attested in the Book of Genesis's Table of Nations passage: "Semitic" from the first-born Shem, and "Hamitic" from the second-born Ham (). Within the Table of Nations, each of Noah's sons is presented as the common progenitor of various people groups deemed to be closely related: among others Shem was the father of the Jews, Assyrians, and Arameans, while Ham was the father of the Egyptians and Cushites. This genealogy does not reflect the actual origins of these peoples' languages: for example, the Canaanites are descendants of Ham according to the Table, even though Hebrew is now classified as a Canaanite language, while the Elamites are ascribed to Shem despite their language being totally unrelated to Hebrew. | 599_23 | jews | The variant Semito-Hamitic is mostly used in older Russian sources. The elements of the name were derived from the names of two sons of Noah as attested in the Book of Genesis's Table of Nations passage: "Semitic" from the first-born Shem, and "Hamitic" from the second-born Ham (). | This genealogy does not reflect the actual origins of these peoples' languages: for example, the Canaanites are descendants of Ham according to the Table, even though Hebrew is now classified as a Canaanite language, while the Elamites are ascribed to Shem despite their language being totally unrelated to Hebrew. | Within the Table of Nations, each of Noah's sons is presented as the common progenitor of various people groups deemed to be closely related: among others Shem was the father of the Jews, Assyrians, and Arameans, while Ham was the father of the Egyptians and Cushites. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0016534769674763083,
"distance": 3,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 99,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002493885112926364,
"distance": 11,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 110,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 99,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.002494 | trailing |
Few official statistics are available on religion; estimates of the Catholic population in 2020 range from 89.5% and 99.21%. The patron saint is Our Lady of Meritxell. There are also members of various Protestant denominations and small numbers of Hindus, and Bahá'ís, In 2022 there were approximately 2000 Muslims and roughly 100 Jews. Largest cities | 600_296 | jews | Few official statistics are available on religion; estimates of the Catholic population in 2020 range from 89.5% and 99.21%. The patron saint is Our Lady of Meritxell. | Largest cities | There are also members of various Protestant denominations and small numbers of Hindus, and Bahá'ís, In 2022 there were approximately 2000 Muslims and roughly 100 Jews. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002259362256154418,
"distance": 32,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 28,
"gendered_word": "Lady",
"word_pos": 60,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.002259 | matching |
The Andorran government necessarily involved planning, projection and forecasts for the future: with the official visit of the French co-prince Charles de Gaulle in 1967 and 1969, it was given approval for the economic boom and national demands within the framework of human rights and international openness. Andorra lived an era commonly known as "Andorran dream" (in relation to the American dream) along with the Trente Glorieuses: the mass culture rooted the country experiencing radical changes in the economy and culture. Proof of this was Ràdio Andorra, the top musical radio station in Europe in this period, with guests and speakers of great importance promoting musical hits of chanson française, swing, rhythm & blues, jazz, rock and roll and American country music. During this period Andorra achieved a GDP per capita and a life expectancy higher than the most standard countries of the current economy. | 600_136 | speakers | The Andorran government necessarily involved planning, projection and forecasts for the future: with the official visit of the French co-prince Charles de Gaulle in 1967 and 1969, it was given approval for the economic boom and national demands within the framework of human rights and international openness. Andorra lived an era commonly known as "Andorran dream" (in relation to the American dream) along with the Trente Glorieuses: the mass culture rooted the country experiencing radical changes in the economy and culture. | During this period Andorra achieved a GDP per capita and a life expectancy higher than the most standard countries of the current economy. | Proof of this was Ràdio Andorra, the top musical radio station in Europe in this period, with guests and speakers of great importance promoting musical hits of chanson française, swing, rhythm & blues, jazz, rock and roll and American country music. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0017781632486730814,
"distance": 91,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 23,
"gendered_word": "prince",
"word_pos": 114,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001778 | preceding |
Such flagrant anti-Soviet bias was unacceptable, and the choice of pigs as the dominant class was thought to be especially offensive. It may reasonably be assumed that the "important official" was a man named Peter Smollett, who was later unmasked as a Soviet agent. Orwell was suspicious of Smollett/Smolka, and he would be one of the names Orwell included in his list of Crypto-Communists and Fellow-Travellers sent to the Information Research Department in 1949. The publisher wrote to Orwell, saying: | 620_177 | travellers | Such flagrant anti-Soviet bias was unacceptable, and the choice of pigs as the dominant class was thought to be especially offensive. It may reasonably be assumed that the "important official" was a man named Peter Smollett, who was later unmasked as a Soviet agent. | The publisher wrote to Orwell, saying: | Orwell was suspicious of Smollett/Smolka, and he would be one of the names Orwell included in his list of Crypto-Communists and Fellow-Travellers sent to the Information Research Department in 1949. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0016093573067337275,
"distance": 42,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 38,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 80,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001609 | preceding |
Alaska is the only state that has no collegiate athletic programs that are members of NCAA Division I, although both Alaska-Fairbanks and Alaska-Anchorage maintain single sport membership in Division I for men's ice hockey. The Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development operates AVTEC, Alaska's Institute of Technology. Campuses in Seward and Anchorage offer one-week to 11-month training programs in areas as diverse as Information Technology, Welding, Nursing, and Mechanics. Alaska has had a problem with a "brain drain". | 624_472 | mechanics | Alaska is the only state that has no collegiate athletic programs that are members of NCAA Division I, although both Alaska-Fairbanks and Alaska-Anchorage maintain single sport membership in Division I for men's ice hockey. The Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development operates AVTEC, Alaska's Institute of Technology. | Alaska has had a problem with a "brain drain". | Campuses in Seward and Anchorage offer one-week to 11-month training programs in areas as diverse as Information Technology, Welding, Nursing, and Mechanics. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0002840980305336416,
"distance": 50,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 36,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 86,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.000284 | preceding |
In many developed countries, immigrants help fill labour shortages in high-value agriculture activities that are difficult to mechanize. Foreign farm workers from mostly Eastern Europe, North Africa and South Asia constituted around one-third of the salaried agricultural workforce in Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal in 2013. In the United States of America, more than half of all hired farmworkers (roughly 450,000 workers) were immigrants in 2019, although the number of new immigrants arriving in the country to work in agriculture has fallen by 75 percent in recent years and rising wages indicate this has led to a major labor shortage on U.S. farms. Around the world, women make up a large share of the population employed in agriculture. | 627_135 | workers | In many developed countries, immigrants help fill labour shortages in high-value agriculture activities that are difficult to mechanize. Foreign farm workers from mostly Eastern Europe, North Africa and South Asia constituted around one-third of the salaried agricultural workforce in Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal in 2013. | Around the world, women make up a large share of the population employed in agriculture. | In the United States of America, more than half of all hired farmworkers (roughly 450,000 workers) were immigrants in 2019, although the number of new immigrants arriving in the country to work in agriculture has fallen by 75 percent in recent years and rising wages indicate this has led to a major labor shortage on U.S. farms. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.014673568308353424,
"distance": 98,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 122,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 24,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00269288569688797,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 122,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.014674 | trailing |
This share is growing in all developing regions except East and Southeast Asia where women already make up about 50 percent of the agricultural workforce. Women make up 47 percent of the agricultural workforce in sub-Saharan Africa, a rate that has not changed significantly in the past few decades. However, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) posits that the roles and responsibilities of women in agriculture may be changing – for example, from subsistence farming to wage employment, and from contributing household members to primary producers in the context of male-out-migration. Safety | 627_139 | producers | This share is growing in all developing regions except East and Southeast Asia where women already make up about 50 percent of the agricultural workforce. Women make up 47 percent of the agricultural workforce in sub-Saharan Africa, a rate that has not changed significantly in the past few decades. | Safety | However, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) posits that the roles and responsibilities of women in agriculture may be changing – for example, from subsistence farming to wage employment, and from contributing household members to primary producers in the context of male-out-migration. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0005743816727772355,
"distance": 85,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 14,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 99,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007505963440053165,
"distance": 73,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 26,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 99,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000731677224393934,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 75,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 99,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0029354896396398544,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 104,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 99,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002935 | trailing |
Another approach is for the user to present a token to the computer terminal, such as a smart card, that has configuration information to adjust the computer speed, text size, etc. to their particular needs. This is useful where users want to access public computer based terminals in Libraries, ATM, Information kiosks etc. The concept is encompassed by the CEN EN 1332-4 Identification Card Systems – Man-Machine Interface. | 653_131 | users | Another approach is for the user to present a token to the computer terminal, such as a smart card, that has configuration information to adjust the computer speed, text size, etc. to their particular needs. | The concept is encompassed by the CEN EN 1332-4 Identification Card Systems – Man-Machine Interface. | This is useful where users want to access public computer based terminals in Libraries, ATM, Information kiosks etc. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005819507874548435,
"distance": 32,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 77,
"gendered_word": "Man",
"word_pos": 45,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00582 | trailing |
In Canada, aboriginal people used bitumen seeping out of the banks of the Athabasca and other rivers to waterproof birch bark canoes, and also heated it in smudge pots to ward off mosquitoes in the summer. Continental Europe
In 1553, Pierre Belon described in his work Observations that pissasphalto, a mixture of pitch and bitumen, was used in the Republic of Ragusa (now Dubrovnik, Croatia) for tarring of ships. An 1838 edition of Mechanics Magazine cites an early use of asphalt in France. A pamphlet dated 1621, by "a certain Monsieur d'Eyrinys, states that he had discovered the existence (of asphaltum) in large quantities in the vicinity of Neufchatel", and that he proposed to use it in a variety of ways – "principally in the construction of air-proof granaries, and in protecting, by means of the arches, the water-courses in the city of Paris from the intrusion of dirt and filth", which at that time made the water unusable. | 657_113 | mechanics | In Canada, aboriginal people used bitumen seeping out of the banks of the Athabasca and other rivers to waterproof birch bark canoes, and also heated it in smudge pots to ward off mosquitoes in the summer. Continental Europe
In 1553, Pierre Belon described in his work Observations that pissasphalto, a mixture of pitch and bitumen, was used in the Republic of Ragusa (now Dubrovnik, Croatia) for tarring of ships. | A pamphlet dated 1621, by "a certain Monsieur d'Eyrinys, states that he had discovered the existence (of asphaltum) in large quantities in the vicinity of Neufchatel", and that he proposed to use it in a variety of ways – "principally in the construction of air-proof granaries, and in protecting, by means of the arches, the water-courses in the city of Paris from the intrusion of dirt and filth", which at that time made the water unusable. | An 1838 edition of Mechanics Magazine cites an early use of asphalt in France. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0026136571541428566,
"distance": 20,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 104,
"gendered_word": "Monsieur",
"word_pos": 84,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.002614 | trailing |
He was determined that the United States should compete, and sought a challenge that maximized its chances of winning. The Soviet Union had heavier-lifting carrier rockets, which meant Kennedy needed to choose a goal that was beyond the capacity of the existing generation of rocketry, one where the US and Soviet Union would be starting from a position of equality—something spectacular, even if it could not be justified on military, economic, or scientific grounds. After consulting with his experts and advisors, he chose such a project: to land a man on the Moon and return him to the Earth. This project already had a name: Project Apollo. | 663_27 | experts | He was determined that the United States should compete, and sought a challenge that maximized its chances of winning. The Soviet Union had heavier-lifting carrier rockets, which meant Kennedy needed to choose a goal that was beyond the capacity of the existing generation of rocketry, one where the US and Soviet Union would be starting from a position of equality—something spectacular, even if it could not be justified on military, economic, or scientific grounds. | This project already had a name: Project Apollo. | After consulting with his experts and advisors, he chose such a project: to land a man on the Moon and return him to the Earth. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0018190405098721385,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 103,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 90,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001819 | trailing |
In 1972, Tarkovsky told film historian Leonid Kozlov his ten favorite films. The list includes: Diary of a Country Priest and Mouchette by Robert Bresson; Winter Light, Wild Strawberries, and Persona by Ingmar Bergman; Nazarín by Luis Buñuel; City Lights by Charlie Chaplin; Ugetsu by Kenji Mizoguchi; Seven Samurai by Akira Kurosawa, and Woman in the Dunes by Hiroshi Teshigahara. Among his favorite directors were Buñuel, Mizoguchi, Bergman, Bresson, Kurosawa, Michelangelo Antonioni, Jean Vigo, and Carl Theodor Dreyer. With the exception of City Lights, the list does not contain any films of the early silent era. | 676_147 | directors | In 1972, Tarkovsky told film historian Leonid Kozlov his ten favorite films. The list includes: Diary of a Country Priest and Mouchette by Robert Bresson; Winter Light, Wild Strawberries, and Persona by Ingmar Bergman; Nazarín by Luis Buñuel; City Lights by Charlie Chaplin; Ugetsu by Kenji Mizoguchi; Seven Samurai by Akira Kurosawa, and Woman in the Dunes by Hiroshi Teshigahara. | With the exception of City Lights, the list does not contain any films of the early silent era. | Among his favorite directors were Buñuel, Mizoguchi, Bergman, Bresson, Kurosawa, Michelangelo Antonioni, Jean Vigo, and Carl Theodor Dreyer. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0016739179845899343,
"distance": 11,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 64,
"gendered_word": "Woman",
"word_pos": 75,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001674 | matching |
And he had to make do with it." The Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami remarked that: "Tarkovsky's works separate me completely from physical life, and are the most spiritual films I have seen". The Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski commented that: "Andrei Tarkovsky was one of the greatest directors of recent years," and regarded Tarkovsky's film Ivan's Childhood as an influence on his own work. The Turkish filmmaker Nuri Bilge Ceylan said that when he first discovered the films of Andrei Tarkovsky as a college student, unsure of what he wanted to do with his life, he was utterly baffled by the lauded Russian master. | 676_307 | directors | And he had to make do with it." The Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami remarked that: "Tarkovsky's works separate me completely from physical life, and are the most spiritual films I have seen". | The Turkish filmmaker Nuri Bilge Ceylan said that when he first discovered the films of Andrei Tarkovsky as a college student, unsure of what he wanted to do with his life, he was utterly baffled by the lauded Russian master. | The Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski commented that: "Andrei Tarkovsky was one of the greatest directors of recent years," and regarded Tarkovsky's film Ivan's Childhood as an influence on his own work. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0019730515778064728,
"distance": 63,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "master",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001973 | trailing |
Andrei's paternal grandfather Aleksandr Karlovich Tarkovsky (in ) was a Polish nobleman who worked as a bank clerk. His wife Maria Danilovna Rachkovskaya was a Romanian language teacher who arrived from Iași. Andrei's maternal grandmother Vera Nikolayevna Vishnyakova (née Dubasova) belonged to an old Dubasov family of Russian nobility that traces its history back to the 17th century; among her relatives was Admiral Fyodor Dubasov, a fact she had to conceal during the Soviet days. She was married to Ivan Ivanovich Vishnyakov, a native of the Kaluga Governorate who studied law at the Moscow State University and served as a judge in Kozelsk. | 676_15 | relatives | Andrei's paternal grandfather Aleksandr Karlovich Tarkovsky (in ) was a Polish nobleman who worked as a bank clerk. His wife Maria Danilovna Rachkovskaya was a Romanian language teacher who arrived from Iași. | She was married to Ivan Ivanovich Vishnyakov, a native of the Kaluga Governorate who studied law at the Moscow State University and served as a judge in Kozelsk. | Andrei's maternal grandmother Vera Nikolayevna Vishnyakova (née Dubasova) belonged to an old Dubasov family of Russian nobility that traces its history back to the 17th century; among her relatives was Admiral Fyodor Dubasov, a fact she had to conceal during the Soviet days. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00823909230530262,
"distance": 66,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 2,
"gendered_word": "paternal",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006215134169906378,
"distance": 65,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 3,
"gendered_word": "grandfather",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.04529930651187897,
"distance": 46,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004904462490230799,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 38,
"gendered_word": "maternal",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.005921944510191679,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 39,
"gendered_word": "grandmother",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.045299 | preceding |
The difficulty of this task arises from the fact that different definitions of what a domain is can be used (e.g. folding autonomy, function, thermodynamic stability, or domain motions), which sometimes results in a single protein having different—yet equally valid—domain assignments. Christianity and Judaism
Christianity and Judaism employ the concept of paradox synonymously with "ambiguity". Many Christians and Jews endorse Rudolf Otto's description of the sacred as 'mysterium tremendum et fascinans', the awe-inspiring mystery which fascinates humans. The apocryphal Book of Judith is noted for the "ingenious ambiguity" expressed by its heroine; for example, she says to the villain of the story, Holofernes, "my lord will not fail to achieve his purposes", without specifying whether my lord refers to the villain or to God. | 677_159 | jews | The difficulty of this task arises from the fact that different definitions of what a domain is can be used (e.g. folding autonomy, function, thermodynamic stability, or domain motions), which sometimes results in a single protein having different—yet equally valid—domain assignments. Christianity and Judaism
Christianity and Judaism employ the concept of paradox synonymously with "ambiguity". | The apocryphal Book of Judith is noted for the "ingenious ambiguity" expressed by its heroine; for example, she says to the villain of the story, Holofernes, "my lord will not fail to achieve his purposes", without specifying whether my lord refers to the villain or to God. | Many Christians and Jews endorse Rudolf Otto's description of the sacred as 'mysterium tremendum et fascinans', the awe-inspiring mystery which fascinates humans. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.007294008508324623,
"distance": 42,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 115,
"gendered_word": "heroine",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000513674458488822,
"distance": 60,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "lord",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0065400851890444756,
"distance": 74,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 147,
"gendered_word": "lord",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.007294 | trailing |
Along with sirenians, hyraxes, elephants, and their extinct relatives, these animals form the superorder Afrotheria. Studies of the brain have shown the similarities with Condylarthra. Evolutionary history
Based on fossils, Bryan Patterson has concluded that early relatives of the aardvark appeared in Africa around the end of the Paleocene. The ptolemaiidans, a mysterious clade of mammals with uncertain affinities, may actually be stem-aardvarks, either as a sister clade to Tubulidentata or as a grade leading to true tubulidentates. | 680_20 | relatives | Along with sirenians, hyraxes, elephants, and their extinct relatives, these animals form the superorder Afrotheria. Studies of the brain have shown the similarities with Condylarthra. | The ptolemaiidans, a mysterious clade of mammals with uncertain affinities, may actually be stem-aardvarks, either as a sister clade to Tubulidentata or as a grade leading to true tubulidentates. | Evolutionary history
Based on fossils, Bryan Patterson has concluded that early relatives of the aardvark appeared in Africa around the end of the Paleocene. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0032336576841771603,
"distance": 69,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 80,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 11,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.008685778826475143,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 80,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.008686 | trailing |
With these events, the Articles were entered into force and the United States of America came into being as a sovereign federal state. Congress had debated the Articles for over a year and a half, and the ratification process had taken nearly three and a half years. Many participants in the original debates were no longer delegates, and some of the signers had only recently arrived. The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union were signed by a group of men who were never present in the Congress at the same time. | 691_227 | participants | With these events, the Articles were entered into force and the United States of America came into being as a sovereign federal state. Congress had debated the Articles for over a year and a half, and the ratification process had taken nearly three and a half years. | The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union were signed by a group of men who were never present in the Congress at the same time. | Many participants in the original debates were no longer delegates, and some of the signers had only recently arrived. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.029550280421972275,
"distance": 33,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 85,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 52,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.02955 | trailing |
He saw this as opposed to the ignorant drive toward earthly utopianism and superficiality of a worldly "Jewish" spirit: [Judaism] is, therefore, the crudest and poorest of all religions and consists merely in an absurd and revolting theism. It amounts to this that the κύριος ['Lord'], who has created the world, desires to be worshipped and adored; and so above all he is jealous, is envious of his colleagues, of all the other gods; if sacrifices are made to them he is furious and his Jews have a bad time ... It is most deplorable that this religion has become the basis of the prevailing religion of Europe; for it is a religion without any metaphysical tendency. | 700_355 | colleagues | He saw this as opposed to the ignorant drive toward earthly utopianism and superficiality of a worldly "Jewish" spirit: [Judaism] is, therefore, the crudest and poorest of all religions and consists merely in an absurd and revolting theism. | It is most deplorable that this religion has become the basis of the prevailing religion of Europe; for it is a religion without any metaphysical tendency. | It amounts to this that the κύριος ['Lord'], who has created the world, desires to be worshipped and adored; and so above all he is jealous, is envious of his colleagues, of all the other gods; if sacrifices are made to them he is furious and his Jews have a bad time ... | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00502620916813612,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "Lord",
"word_pos": 84,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005026 | matching |
He saw this as opposed to the ignorant drive toward earthly utopianism and superficiality of a worldly "Jewish" spirit: [Judaism] is, therefore, the crudest and poorest of all religions and consists merely in an absurd and revolting theism. It amounts to this that the κύριος ['Lord'], who has created the world, desires to be worshipped and adored; and so above all he is jealous, is envious of his colleagues, of all the other gods; if sacrifices are made to them he is furious and his Jews have a bad time ... It is most deplorable that this religion has become the basis of the prevailing religion of Europe; for it is a religion without any metaphysical tendency. | 700_355 | jews | He saw this as opposed to the ignorant drive toward earthly utopianism and superficiality of a worldly "Jewish" spirit: [Judaism] is, therefore, the crudest and poorest of all religions and consists merely in an absurd and revolting theism. | It is most deplorable that this religion has become the basis of the prevailing religion of Europe; for it is a religion without any metaphysical tendency. | It amounts to this that the κύριος ['Lord'], who has created the world, desires to be worshipped and adored; and so above all he is jealous, is envious of his colleagues, of all the other gods; if sacrifices are made to them he is furious and his Jews have a bad time ... | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0015951429959386587,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "Lord",
"word_pos": 103,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001595 | matching |
It amounts to this that the κύριος ['Lord'], who has created the world, desires to be worshipped and adored; and so above all he is jealous, is envious of his colleagues, of all the other gods; if sacrifices are made to them he is furious and his Jews have a bad time ... It is most deplorable that this religion has become the basis of the prevailing religion of Europe; for it is a religion without any metaphysical tendency. While all other religions endeavor to explain to the people by symbols the metaphysical significance of life, the religion of the Jews is entirely immanent and furnishes nothing but a mere war-cry in the struggle with other nations. Women
In his 1851 essay "On Women", Schopenhauer expressed opposition to what he called "Teutonico-Christian stupidity" of "reflexive, unexamined reverence for the female (abgeschmackten Weiberveneration)". | 700_357 | jews | It amounts to this that the κύριος ['Lord'], who has created the world, desires to be worshipped and adored; and so above all he is jealous, is envious of his colleagues, of all the other gods; if sacrifices are made to them he is furious and his Jews have a bad time ... It is most deplorable that this religion has become the basis of the prevailing religion of Europe; for it is a religion without any metaphysical tendency. | Women
In his 1851 essay "On Women", Schopenhauer expressed opposition to what he called "Teutonico-Christian stupidity" of "reflexive, unexamined reverence for the female (abgeschmackten Weiberveneration)". | While all other religions endeavor to explain to the people by symbols the metaphysical significance of life, the religion of the Jews is entirely immanent and furnishes nothing but a mere war-cry in the struggle with other nations. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002216415712609887,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "Lord",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0002576342085376382,
"distance": 76,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00018921960145235062,
"distance": 84,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 141,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00017053826013579965,
"distance": 108,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 165,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000259614665992558,
"distance": 104,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "Lord",
"word_pos": 113,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000499111891258508,
"distance": 20,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 113,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005285022198222578,
"distance": 28,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 141,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 113,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000771365943364799,
"distance": 52,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 165,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 113,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.002216 | preceding |
As of the 2021 Canadian Census, the ten most spoken languages in the province included English (4,109,720 or 98.37%), French (260,415 or 6.23%), Tagalog (172,625 or 4.13%), Punjabi (126,385 or 3.03%), Spanish (116,070 or 2.78%), Hindi (94,015 or 2.25%), Mandarin (82,095 or 1.97%), Arabic (76,760 or 1.84%), Cantonese (74,960 or 1.79%), and German (65,370 or 1.56%). The question on knowledge of languages allows for multiple responses. As of the 2016 census, English is the most common mother tongue, with 2,991,485 native speakers. This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. | 717_197 | speakers | As of the 2021 Canadian Census, the ten most spoken languages in the province included English (4,109,720 or 98.37%), French (260,415 or 6.23%), Tagalog (172,625 or 4.13%), Punjabi (126,385 or 3.03%), Spanish (116,070 or 2.78%), Hindi (94,015 or 2.25%), Mandarin (82,095 or 1.97%), Arabic (76,760 or 1.84%), Cantonese (74,960 or 1.79%), and German (65,370 or 1.56%). The question on knowledge of languages allows for multiple responses. | This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. | As of the 2016 census, English is the most common mother tongue, with 2,991,485 native speakers. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.012403751723468304,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 125,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0030576069839298725,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 135,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008278302266262472,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 141,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009247290436178446,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 148,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0010999933583661914,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 155,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.012404 | trailing |
The question on knowledge of languages allows for multiple responses. As of the 2016 census, English is the most common mother tongue, with 2,991,485 native speakers. This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. | 717_198 | speakers | The question on knowledge of languages allows for multiple responses. As of the 2016 census, English is the most common mother tongue, with 2,991,485 native speakers. | The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. | This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003500009886920452,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002862629247829318,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001497459365054965,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 38,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008588527562096715,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 38,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00019642768893390894,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00002496316665201448,
"distance": 32,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009482523892074823,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 51,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00039468257455155253,
"distance": 25,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 51,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00016448149108327925,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 58,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00003285937418695539,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 58,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00017366078100167215,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 70,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00004709190397989005,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 70,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.0035 | preceding |
As of the 2016 census, English is the most common mother tongue, with 2,991,485 native speakers. This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. The next most common mother tongues were Chinese with 97,275 native speakers (3.02%), followed by German with 84,505 native speakers (2.62%) and French with 61,225 (1.90%). | 717_199 | speakers | As of the 2016 census, English is the most common mother tongue, with 2,991,485 native speakers. This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. | The next most common mother tongues were Chinese with 97,275 native speakers (3.02%), followed by German with 84,505 native speakers (2.62%) and French with 61,225 (1.90%). | The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0032349703833460808,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 17,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0019463403150439262,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 17,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0018991343677043915,
"distance": 64,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 17,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0006965386564843357,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 27,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0004642179701477289,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 27,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005116169340908527,
"distance": 54,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 27,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00011674852430587634,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000025743323931237683,
"distance": 32,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00008635361155029386,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008259047172032297,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0002810241130646318,
"distance": 25,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00044085615081712604,
"distance": 41,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00007576863572467119,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 47,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000017326110537396744,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 47,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00010238218237645924,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 47,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00011015128984581679,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000041655817767605186,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00018156346050091088,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00041244999738410115,
"distance": 77,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 88,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00021535786800086498,
"distance": 23,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 88,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013255372177809477,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 88,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.003918671049177647,
"distance": 89,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00015849608462303877,
"distance": 35,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 65,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002103053033351898,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 81,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003919 | preceding |
This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. The next most common mother tongues were Chinese with 97,275 native speakers (3.02%), followed by German with 84,505 native speakers (2.62%) and French with 61,225 (1.90%). Other mother tongues include: Punjabi, with 36,320 native speakers (1.13%); Tagalog, with 29,740 (0.92%); Ukrainian, with 29,455 (0.91%); Spanish, with 29,125 (0.90%); Polish, with 21,990 (0.68%); Arabic, with 20,495 (0.64%); Dutch, with 19,980 (0.62%); and Vietnamese, with 19,350 (0.60%). | 717_200 | speakers | This is followed by Tagalog, with 99,035 speakers, German, with 80,050 speakers, French, with 72,150 native speakers, and Punjabi, with 68,695 speakers. The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. | Other mother tongues include: Punjabi, with 36,320 native speakers (1.13%); Tagalog, with 29,740 (0.92%); Ukrainian, with 29,455 (0.91%); Spanish, with 29,125 (0.90%); Polish, with 21,990 (0.68%); Arabic, with 20,495 (0.64%); Dutch, with 19,980 (0.62%); and Vietnamese, with 19,350 (0.60%). | The next most common mother tongues were Chinese with 97,275 native speakers (3.02%), followed by German with 84,505 native speakers (2.62%) and French with 61,225 (1.90%). | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00032438902417197824,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 8,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0002688355161808431,
"distance": 54,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 8,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00012392422650009394,
"distance": 88,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 8,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008316996390931308,
"distance": 32,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 14,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0017242212779819965,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 14,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0006372025818563998,
"distance": 82,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 14,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00012780187535099685,
"distance": 25,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 21,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009828222682699561,
"distance": 41,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 21,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.028290703892707825,
"distance": 75,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 21,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0004537667555268854,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000993222463876009,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00032133559579961,
"distance": 68,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0020469953306019306,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0038244309835135937,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0006697042845189571,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 40,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002711556851863861,
"distance": 23,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007854867144487798,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005273942369967699,
"distance": 27,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004157109186053276,
"distance": 35,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 81,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0006623833323828876,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 81,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0003740343381650746,
"distance": 15,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 81,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00016915600281208754,
"distance": 59,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 46,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 105,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000874385004863143,
"distance": 43,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 105,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00029299684683792293,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 96,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 105,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.028291 | trailing |
The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. The next most common mother tongues were Chinese with 97,275 native speakers (3.02%), followed by German with 84,505 native speakers (2.62%) and French with 61,225 (1.90%). Other mother tongues include: Punjabi, with 36,320 native speakers (1.13%); Tagalog, with 29,740 (0.92%); Ukrainian, with 29,455 (0.91%); Spanish, with 29,125 (0.90%); Polish, with 21,990 (0.68%); Arabic, with 20,495 (0.64%); Dutch, with 19,980 (0.62%); and Vietnamese, with 19,350 (0.60%). The most common aboriginal language is Cree 17,215 (0.53%). | 717_201 | speakers | The 2006 census found that English, with 2,576,670 native speakers, was the most common mother tongue of Albertans, representing 79.99% of the population. The next most common mother tongues were Chinese with 97,275 native speakers (3.02%), followed by German with 84,505 native speakers (2.62%) and French with 61,225 (1.90%). | The most common aboriginal language is Cree 17,215 (0.53%). | Other mother tongues include: Punjabi, with 36,320 native speakers (1.13%); Tagalog, with 29,740 (0.92%); Ukrainian, with 29,455 (0.91%); Spanish, with 29,125 (0.90%); Polish, with 21,990 (0.68%); Arabic, with 20,495 (0.64%); Dutch, with 19,980 (0.62%); and Vietnamese, with 19,350 (0.60%). | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0038723291363567114,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 16,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 10,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0029150720220059156,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 32,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 10,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0002638153382577002,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 66,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 10,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0016241379780694842,
"distance": 23,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 16,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 39,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0038566456642001867,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 32,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 39,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00256899232044816,
"distance": 27,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 66,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 39,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009030287037603557,
"distance": 35,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 16,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 51,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0006703530671074986,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 32,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 51,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0027286650147289038,
"distance": 15,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 66,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 51,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0017360092606395483,
"distance": 59,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 16,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 75,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0015287105925381184,
"distance": 43,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 32,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 75,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002761873882263899,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 66,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 75,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003872 | preceding |
Other mother tongues include: Punjabi, with 36,320 native speakers (1.13%); Tagalog, with 29,740 (0.92%); Ukrainian, with 29,455 (0.91%); Spanish, with 29,125 (0.90%); Polish, with 21,990 (0.68%); Arabic, with 20,495 (0.64%); Dutch, with 19,980 (0.62%); and Vietnamese, with 19,350 (0.60%). The most common aboriginal language is Cree 17,215 (0.53%). Other common mother tongues include Italian with 13,095 speakers (0.41%); Urdu with 11,275 (0.35%); and Korean with 10,845 (0.33%); then Hindi 8,985 (0.28%); Persian 7,700 (0.24%); Portuguese 7,205 (0.22%); and Hungarian 6,770 (0.21%). According to Statistics Canada, Alberta is home to the second-highest proportion (2%) of Francophones in western Canada (after Manitoba). | 717_203 | speakers | Other mother tongues include: Punjabi, with 36,320 native speakers (1.13%); Tagalog, with 29,740 (0.92%); Ukrainian, with 29,455 (0.91%); Spanish, with 29,125 (0.90%); Polish, with 21,990 (0.68%); Arabic, with 20,495 (0.64%); Dutch, with 19,980 (0.62%); and Vietnamese, with 19,350 (0.60%). The most common aboriginal language is Cree 17,215 (0.53%). | According to Statistics Canada, Alberta is home to the second-highest proportion (2%) of Francophones in western Canada (after Manitoba). | Other common mother tongues include Italian with 13,095 speakers (0.41%); Urdu with 11,275 (0.35%); and Korean with 10,845 (0.33%); then Hindi 8,985 (0.28%); Persian 7,700 (0.24%); Portuguese 7,205 (0.22%); and Hungarian 6,770 (0.21%). | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002612678101286292,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 1,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 10,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0002449266903568059,
"distance": 85,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 95,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 10,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004215875640511513,
"distance": 100,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 1,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 101,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0011393744498491287,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 95,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 101,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004216 | preceding |
Childhood, youth and education Albert Einstein was born in Ulm, in the Kingdom of Württemberg in the German Empire, on 14 March 1879. His parents, secular Ashkenazi Jews, were Hermann Einstein, a salesman and engineer, and Pauline Koch. In 1880, the family moved to Munich, where Einstein's father and his uncle Jakob founded Elektrotechnische Fabrik J. | 736_32 | jews | Childhood, youth and education Albert Einstein was born in Ulm, in the Kingdom of Württemberg in the German Empire, on 14 March 1879. | In 1880, the family moved to Munich, where Einstein's father and his uncle Jakob founded Elektrotechnische Fabrik J. | His parents, secular Ashkenazi Jews, were Hermann Einstein, a salesman and engineer, and Pauline Koch. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0008102746214717627,
"distance": 27,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 59,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 32,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00033787108259275556,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "uncle",
"word_pos": 32,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.00081 | trailing |
For the likes of us the mere thought is unspeakably dreary".) He was greeted with even greater enthusiasm on the last leg of his tour, in which he spent twelve days in Mandatory Palestine, newly entrusted to British rule by the League of Nations in the aftermath of the First World War. Sir Herbert Samuel, the British High Commissioner, welcomed him with a degree of ceremony normally only accorded to a visiting head of state, including a cannon salute. One reception held in his honor was stormed by people determined to hear him speak: he told them that he was happy that Jews were beginning to be recognized as a force in the world. Einstein's decision to tour the eastern hemisphere in 1922 meant that he was unable to go to Stockholm in the December of that year to participate in the Nobel prize ceremony. | 736_162 | jews | For the likes of us the mere thought is unspeakably dreary".) He was greeted with even greater enthusiasm on the last leg of his tour, in which he spent twelve days in Mandatory Palestine, newly entrusted to British rule by the League of Nations in the aftermath of the First World War. Sir Herbert Samuel, the British High Commissioner, welcomed him with a degree of ceremony normally only accorded to a visiting head of state, including a cannon salute. | Einstein's decision to tour the eastern hemisphere in 1922 meant that he was unable to go to Stockholm in the December of that year to participate in the Nobel prize ceremony. | One reception held in his honor was stormed by people determined to hear him speak: he told them that he was happy that Jews were beginning to be recognized as a force in the world. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005540219601243734,
"distance": 55,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 58,
"gendered_word": "Sir",
"word_pos": 113,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.00554 | preceding |
Eventually it was with the help of Marcel Grossmann's father that he secured a post in Bern at the Swiss Patent Office, as an assistant examiner – level III. Patent applications that landed on Einstein's desk for his evaluation included ideas for a gravel sorter and an electric typewriter. His employers were pleased enough with his work to make his position permanent in 1903, although they did not think that he should be promoted until he had "fully mastered machine technology". It is conceivable that his labors at the patent office had a bearing on his development of his special theory of relativity. | 736_96 | employers | Eventually it was with the help of Marcel Grossmann's father that he secured a post in Bern at the Swiss Patent Office, as an assistant examiner – level III. Patent applications that landed on Einstein's desk for his evaluation included ideas for a gravel sorter and an electric typewriter. | It is conceivable that his labors at the patent office had a bearing on his development of his special theory of relativity. | His employers were pleased enough with his work to make his position permanent in 1903, although they did not think that he should be promoted until he had "fully mastered machine technology". | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0007399466703645885,
"distance": 45,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 10,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 55,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00074 | preceding |
The Sikh festival of Vaisakhi is celebrated by the Sikh community and the Hindu festival Diwali by the Hindu community. National Independence Day is celebrated on 19 August to mark the Anglo-Afghan Treaty of 1919 and the country's full independence. Several international celebrations are also officially held in Afghanistan, such as International Workers' Day and International Women's Day. Some regional festivals include the Pamir Festival, which celebrates the culture of the Wakhi and Kyrgyz peoples, the Red Flower Festival (during Nowruz) in Mazar-i-Sharif and the Damboora Festival in Bamyan Province. | 737_712 | workers | The Sikh festival of Vaisakhi is celebrated by the Sikh community and the Hindu festival Diwali by the Hindu community. National Independence Day is celebrated on 19 August to mark the Anglo-Afghan Treaty of 1919 and the country's full independence. | Some regional festivals include the Pamir Festival, which celebrates the culture of the Wakhi and Kyrgyz peoples, the Red Flower Festival (during Nowruz) in Mazar-i-Sharif and the Damboora Festival in Bamyan Province. | Several international celebrations are also officially held in Afghanistan, such as International Workers' Day and International Women's Day. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.03317997604608536,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 63,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 58,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.03318 | trailing |
As Prime Minister, he implemented numerous reforms focused on modernising the economy, as well as democratising state institutions, including the country's judiciary and law enforcement. Unemployment has been steadily reduced, with Albania achieving the 4th lowest unemployment rate in the Balkans. Rama has also placed gender equality at the centre of his agenda; since 2017 almost 50% of the ministers are female, the largest number of women serving in the country's history. During the 2021 parliamentary elections, the ruling Socialist Party led by Edi Rama secured its third consecutive victory, winning nearly half of votes and enough seats in parliament to govern alone. | 738_205 | ministers | As Prime Minister, he implemented numerous reforms focused on modernising the economy, as well as democratising state institutions, including the country's judiciary and law enforcement. Unemployment has been steadily reduced, with Albania achieving the 4th lowest unemployment rate in the Balkans. | During the 2021 parliamentary elections, the ruling Socialist Party led by Edi Rama secured its third consecutive victory, winning nearly half of votes and enough seats in parliament to govern alone. | Rama has also placed gender equality at the centre of his agenda; since 2017 almost 50% of the ministers are female, the largest number of women serving in the country's history. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.008567633107304573,
"distance": 2,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 70,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002698351629078388,
"distance": 8,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.008568 | matching |
Pre-Islamic pagan Arabs believed in a blind, powerful, inexorable and insensible fate over which man had no control. This was replaced with the Islamic notion of a powerful but provident and merciful God. According to Francis Edward Peters, "The Qur’ān insists, Muslims believe, and historians affirm that Muhammad and his followers worship the same God as the Jews (). The Qur’an's Allah is the same Creator God who covenanted with Abraham". | 740_73 | jews | Pre-Islamic pagan Arabs believed in a blind, powerful, inexorable and insensible fate over which man had no control. This was replaced with the Islamic notion of a powerful but provident and merciful God. | The Qur’an's Allah is the same Creator God who covenanted with Abraham". | According to Francis Edward Peters, "The Qur’ān insists, Muslims believe, and historians affirm that Muhammad and his followers worship the same God as the Jews (). | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0013125836849212646,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 18,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001313 | preceding |
Azerbaijan hosted several major sport competitions since the late 2000s, including the 2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, 2012 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup, 2011 AIBA World Boxing Championships, 2010 European Wrestling Championships, 2009 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships, 2014 European Taekwondo Championships, 2014 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships, and 2016 World Chess Olympiad. On 8 December 2012, Baku was selected to host the 2015 European Games, the first to be held in the competition's history. Baku also hosted the fourth Islamic Solidarity Games in 2017 and the 2019 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival, and it is also one of the hosts of UEFA Euro 2020, which because of Covid-19 is being held in 2021. See also | 746_562 | hosts | Azerbaijan hosted several major sport competitions since the late 2000s, including the 2013 F1 Powerboat World Championship, 2012 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup, 2011 AIBA World Boxing Championships, 2010 European Wrestling Championships, 2009 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships, 2014 European Taekwondo Championships, 2014 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships, and 2016 World Chess Olympiad. On 8 December 2012, Baku was selected to host the 2015 European Games, the first to be held in the competition's history. | See also | Baku also hosted the fourth Islamic Solidarity Games in 2017 and the 2019 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival, and it is also one of the hosts of UEFA Euro 2020, which because of Covid-19 is being held in 2021. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.000505798845551908,
"distance": 91,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 113,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000506 | preceding |
Backgammon also plays a major role in Azerbaijani culture. The game is very popular in Azerbaijan and is widely played among the local public. There are also different variations of backgammon developed and analyzed by Azerbaijani experts. Azerbaijan Women's Volleyball Super League is one of the strongest women leagues in the world. | 746_552 | experts | Backgammon also plays a major role in Azerbaijani culture. The game is very popular in Azerbaijan and is widely played among the local public. | Azerbaijan Women's Volleyball Super League is one of the strongest women leagues in the world. | There are also different variations of backgammon developed and analyzed by Azerbaijani experts. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.047001712024211884,
"distance": 3,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 41,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 38,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005615765694528818,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 51,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 38,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.047002 | trailing |
Referring to the U.S., historian Linda Gordon states: "In fact, illegal abortions in this country have an impressive safety record." According to Rickie Solinger, Authors Jerome Bates and Edward Zawadzki describe the case of an illegal abortionist in the eastern U.S. in the early 20th century who was proud of having successfully completed 13,844 abortions without any fatality. In 1870s New York City the famous abortionist/midwife Madame Restell (Anna Trow Lohman) appears to have lost very few women among her more than 100,000 patients—a lower mortality rate than the childbirth mortality rate at the time. In 1936, the prominent professor of obstetrics and gynecology Frederick J. | 765_138 | patients | Referring to the U.S., historian Linda Gordon states: "In fact, illegal abortions in this country have an impressive safety record." According to Rickie Solinger, Authors Jerome Bates and Edward Zawadzki describe the case of an illegal abortionist in the eastern U.S. in the early 20th century who was proud of having successfully completed 13,844 abortions without any fatality. | In 1936, the prominent professor of obstetrics and gynecology Frederick J. | In 1870s New York City the famous abortionist/midwife Madame Restell (Anna Trow Lohman) appears to have lost very few women among her more than 100,000 patients—a lower mortality rate than the childbirth mortality rate at the time. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0004933972959406674,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 89,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 95,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000493 | matching |
Statements made in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the codified summary of the Church's teachings, considers abortion from the moment of conception as homicide and called for the end of legal abortion. Denominations that support abortion rights with some limits include the United Methodist Church, Episcopal Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and Presbyterian Church USA. A 2014 Guttmacher survey of abortion patients in the United States found that many reported a religious affiliation: 24% were Catholic while 30% were Protestant. A 1995 survey reported that Catholic women are as likely as the general population to terminate a pregnancy, Protestants are less likely to do so, and evangelical Christians are the least likely to do so. | 765_275 | patients | Statements made in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the codified summary of the Church's teachings, considers abortion from the moment of conception as homicide and called for the end of legal abortion. Denominations that support abortion rights with some limits include the United Methodist Church, Episcopal Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and Presbyterian Church USA. | A 1995 survey reported that Catholic women are as likely as the general population to terminate a pregnancy, Protestants are less likely to do so, and evangelical Christians are the least likely to do so. | A 2014 Guttmacher survey of abortion patients in the United States found that many reported a religious affiliation: 24% were Catholic while 30% were Protestant. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0030837934464216232,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 99,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 70,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003084 | trailing |
The unsafe abortion rate in developing countries is partly attributable to lack of access to modern contraceptives; according to the Guttmacher Institute, providing access to contraceptives would result in about 14.5 million fewer unsafe abortions and 38,000 fewer deaths from unsafe abortion annually worldwide. The rate of legal, induced abortion varies extensively worldwide. According to the report of employees of Guttmacher Institute it ranged from 7 per 1000 women per year (Germany and Switzerland) to 30 per 1000 women per year (Estonia) in countries with complete statistics in 2008. The proportion of pregnancies that ended in induced abortion ranged from about 10% (Israel, the Netherlands and Switzerland) to 30% (Estonia) in the same group, though it might be as high as 36% in Hungary and Romania, whose statistics were deemed incomplete. | 765_189 | employees | The unsafe abortion rate in developing countries is partly attributable to lack of access to modern contraceptives; according to the Guttmacher Institute, providing access to contraceptives would result in about 14.5 million fewer unsafe abortions and 38,000 fewer deaths from unsafe abortion annually worldwide. The rate of legal, induced abortion varies extensively worldwide. | The proportion of pregnancies that ended in induced abortion ranged from about 10% (Israel, the Netherlands and Switzerland) to 30% (Estonia) in the same group, though it might be as high as 36% in Hungary and Romania, whose statistics were deemed incomplete. | According to the report of employees of Guttmacher Institute it ranged from 7 per 1000 women per year (Germany and Switzerland) to 30 per 1000 women per year (Estonia) in countries with complete statistics in 2008. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.000494610343594104,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 73,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 63,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004946339875459671,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 85,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 63,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004946 | matching |
Notable perpetrators of anti-abortion violence include Eric Robert Rudolph, Scott Roeder, Shelley Shannon, and Paul Jennings Hill, the first person to be executed in the United States for murdering an abortion provider. Legal protection of access to abortion has been brought into some countries where abortion is legal. These laws typically seek to protect abortion clinics from obstruction, vandalism, picketing, and other actions, or to protect women and employees of such facilities from threats and harassment. Far more common than physical violence is psychological pressure. | 765_348 | employees | Notable perpetrators of anti-abortion violence include Eric Robert Rudolph, Scott Roeder, Shelley Shannon, and Paul Jennings Hill, the first person to be executed in the United States for murdering an abortion provider. Legal protection of access to abortion has been brought into some countries where abortion is legal. | Far more common than physical violence is psychological pressure. | These laws typically seek to protect abortion clinics from obstruction, vandalism, picketing, and other actions, or to protect women and employees of such facilities from threats and harassment. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005957520566880703,
"distance": 2,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 78,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 80,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005958 | trailing |
However, women seeking abortion who are denied access to abortion have an increase in anxiety after the denial. Although some studies show negative mental-health outcomes in women who choose abortions after the first trimester because of fetal abnormalities, more rigorous research would be needed to show this conclusively. Some proposed negative psychological effects of abortion have been referred to by anti-abortion advocates as a separate condition called "post-abortion syndrome", but this is not recognized by medical or psychological professionals in the United States. A 2020 long term-study among US women found that about 99% of women felt that they made the right decision five years after they had an abortion. | 765_148 | advocates | However, women seeking abortion who are denied access to abortion have an increase in anxiety after the denial. Although some studies show negative mental-health outcomes in women who choose abortions after the first trimester because of fetal abnormalities, more rigorous research would be needed to show this conclusively. | A 2020 long term-study among US women found that about 99% of women felt that they made the right decision five years after they had an abortion. | Some proposed negative psychological effects of abortion have been referred to by anti-abortion advocates as a separate condition called "post-abortion syndrome", but this is not recognized by medical or psychological professionals in the United States. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002801821567118168,
"distance": 67,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 2,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001647137920372188,
"distance": 39,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 30,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.027953755110502243,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 105,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004119924269616604,
"distance": 43,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 112,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.027954 | trailing |
Premature births and stillbirths are generally not considered to be miscarriages, although usage of these terms can sometimes overlap. Studies of pregnant women in the US and China have shown that between 40% and 60% of embryos do not progress to birth. The vast majority of miscarriages occur before the woman is aware that she is pregnant, and many pregnancies spontaneously abort before medical practitioners can detect an embryo. Between 15% and 30% of known pregnancies end in clinically apparent miscarriage, depending upon the age and health of the pregnant woman. | 765_49 | practitioners | Premature births and stillbirths are generally not considered to be miscarriages, although usage of these terms can sometimes overlap. Studies of pregnant women in the US and China have shown that between 40% and 60% of embryos do not progress to birth. | Between 15% and 30% of known pregnancies end in clinically apparent miscarriage, depending upon the age and health of the pregnant woman. | The vast majority of miscarriages occur before the woman is aware that she is pregnant, and many pregnancies spontaneously abort before medical practitioners can detect an embryo. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.006214679218828678,
"distance": 46,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 24,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 70,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006273952312767506,
"distance": 15,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 70,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.005125018768012524,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 100,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 70,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006274 | matching |
Hysterotomy and hysterectomy are associated with much higher rates of maternal morbidity and mortality than D&E or induction abortion. First trimester procedures can generally be performed using local anesthesia, while second trimester methods may require deep sedation or general anesthesia. Labor induction abortion
In places lacking the necessary medical skill for dilation and extraction, or when preferred by practitioners, an abortion can be induced by first inducing labor and then inducing fetal demise if necessary. This is sometimes called "induced miscarriage". | 765_90 | practitioners | Hysterotomy and hysterectomy are associated with much higher rates of maternal morbidity and mortality than D&E or induction abortion. First trimester procedures can generally be performed using local anesthesia, while second trimester methods may require deep sedation or general anesthesia. | This is sometimes called "induced miscarriage". | Labor induction abortion
In places lacking the necessary medical skill for dilation and extraction, or when preferred by practitioners, an abortion can be induced by first inducing labor and then inducing fetal demise if necessary. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0004524527466855943,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 10,
"gendered_word": "maternal",
"word_pos": 63,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000452 | preceding |
Some medical scholars and abortion opponents have suggested that the Hippocratic Oath forbade physicians in Ancient Greece from performing abortions; other scholars disagree with this interpretation, and state that the medical texts of Hippocratic Corpus contain descriptions of abortive techniques right alongside the Oath. The physician Scribonius Largus wrote in 43 CE that the Hippocratic Oath prohibits abortion, as did Soranus of Ephesus, although apparently not all doctors adhered to it strictly at the time. According to Soranus' 1st or 2nd century CE work Gynaecology, one party of medical practitioners banished all abortives as required by the Hippocratic Oath; the other party to which he belonged was willing to prescribe abortions only for the sake of the mother's health. In Politics (350 BCE), Aristotle condemned infanticide as a means of population control. | 765_262 | practitioners | Some medical scholars and abortion opponents have suggested that the Hippocratic Oath forbade physicians in Ancient Greece from performing abortions; other scholars disagree with this interpretation, and state that the medical texts of Hippocratic Corpus contain descriptions of abortive techniques right alongside the Oath. The physician Scribonius Largus wrote in 43 CE that the Hippocratic Oath prohibits abortion, as did Soranus of Ephesus, although apparently not all doctors adhered to it strictly at the time. | In Politics (350 BCE), Aristotle condemned infanticide as a means of population control. | According to Soranus' 1st or 2nd century CE work Gynaecology, one party of medical practitioners banished all abortives as required by the Hippocratic Oath; the other party to which he belonged was willing to prescribe abortions only for the sake of the mother's health. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005013845860958099,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 127,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 98,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005014 | trailing |
Under common law, including early English common law dating back to Edward Coke in 1648, abortion was generally permitted before quickening (14–26 weeks after conception, or between the fourth and sixth month), and at women's discretion; it was whether abortion was performed after quickening that determined if it was a crime. In Europe and North America, abortion techniques advanced starting in the 17th century; the conservatism of most in the medical profession with regards to sexual matters prevented the wide expansion of abortion techniques. Other medical practitioners in addition to some physicians advertised their services, and they were not widely regulated until the 19th century when the practice, sometimes called restellism, was banned in both the United States and the United Kingdom. Some 19th-century physicians, one of the most famous and consequential being American Horatio Storer, argued for anti-abortion laws on racist and misogynist as well as moral grounds. | 765_282 | practitioners | Under common law, including early English common law dating back to Edward Coke in 1648, abortion was generally permitted before quickening (14–26 weeks after conception, or between the fourth and sixth month), and at women's discretion; it was whether abortion was performed after quickening that determined if it was a crime. In Europe and North America, abortion techniques advanced starting in the 17th century; the conservatism of most in the medical profession with regards to sexual matters prevented the wide expansion of abortion techniques. | Some 19th-century physicians, one of the most famous and consequential being American Horatio Storer, argued for anti-abortion laws on racist and misogynist as well as moral grounds. | Other medical practitioners in addition to some physicians advertised their services, and they were not widely regulated until the 19th century when the practice, sometimes called restellism, was banned in both the United States and the United Kingdom. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0013199368258938193,
"distance": 58,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 40,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 98,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00132 | preceding |
Approximately 13,000 Natives fought on the British side, with the largest group coming from the Iroquois tribes who deployed around 1,500 men. Early in July 1776, Cherokee allies of Britain attacked the short-lived Washington District of North Carolina. Their defeat splintered both Cherokee settlements and people, and was directly responsible for the rise of the Chickamauga Cherokee, who perpetuated the Cherokee–American wars against American settlers for decades after hostilities with Britain ended. Creek and Seminole allies of Britain fought against Americans in Georgia and South Carolina. | 771_549 | settlers | Approximately 13,000 Natives fought on the British side, with the largest group coming from the Iroquois tribes who deployed around 1,500 men. Early in July 1776, Cherokee allies of Britain attacked the short-lived Washington District of North Carolina. | Creek and Seminole allies of Britain fought against Americans in Georgia and South Carolina. | Their defeat splintered both Cherokee settlements and people, and was directly responsible for the rise of the Chickamauga Cherokee, who perpetuated the Cherokee–American wars against American settlers for decades after hostilities with Britain ended. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0011362608056515455,
"distance": 52,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 74,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001136 | preceding |
Native American allies of the British and some freed blacks were left to escape unaided through the American lines. Washington moved his army to New Windsor on the Hudson River about sixty miles north of New York City, and there the substance of the Continental Army was furloughed home with officers at half pay until the Treaty of Paris formally ended the war on September 3, 1783. At that time, Congress decommissioned the regiments of Washington's Continental Army and began issuing land grants to veterans in the Northwest Territories for their war service. The last British occupation of New York City ended on November 25, 1783, with the departure of Clinton's replacement, General Sir Guy Carleton. | 771_360 | veterans | Native American allies of the British and some freed blacks were left to escape unaided through the American lines. Washington moved his army to New Windsor on the Hudson River about sixty miles north of New York City, and there the substance of the Continental Army was furloughed home with officers at half pay until the Treaty of Paris formally ended the war on September 3, 1783. | The last British occupation of New York City ended on November 25, 1783, with the departure of Clinton's replacement, General Sir Guy Carleton. | At that time, Congress decommissioned the regiments of Washington's Continental Army and began issuing land grants to veterans in the Northwest Territories for their war service. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002450543688610196,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 124,
"gendered_word": "Sir",
"word_pos": 90,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002451 | trailing |
Tribes in the Northwest Territory joined as the Western Confederacy and allied with the British to resist American settlement, and their conflict continued after the Revolutionary War as the Northwest Indian War. Britain's "American war" and peace Changing Prime Ministers Lord North, Prime Minister since 1770, delegated control of the war in North America to Lord George Germain and the Earl of Sandwich, who was head of the Royal Navy from 1771 to 1782. | 771_562 | ministers | Tribes in the Northwest Territory joined as the Western Confederacy and allied with the British to resist American settlement, and their conflict continued after the Revolutionary War as the Northwest Indian War. Britain's "American war" and peace | Lord North, Prime Minister since 1770, delegated control of the war in North America to Lord George Germain and the Earl of Sandwich, who was head of the Royal Navy from 1771 to 1782. | Changing Prime Ministers | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0050993068143725395,
"distance": 1,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 45,
"gendered_word": "Lord",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0018493917305022478,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "Lord",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0014544542646035552,
"distance": 23,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 67,
"gendered_word": "Earl",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.005099 | trailing |
Sometime after the wedding, Philip is said to have seen himself, in a dream, securing his wife's womb with a seal engraved with a lion's image. Plutarch offered a variety of interpretations for these dreams: that Olympias was pregnant before her marriage, indicated by the sealing of her womb; or that Alexander's father was Zeus. Ancient commentators were divided about whether the ambitious Olympias promulgated the story of Alexander's divine parentage, variously claiming that she had told Alexander, or that she dismissed the suggestion as impious. On the day Alexander was born, Philip was preparing a siege on the city of Potidea on the peninsula of Chalcidice. | 783_30 | commentators | Sometime after the wedding, Philip is said to have seen himself, in a dream, securing his wife's womb with a seal engraved with a lion's image. Plutarch offered a variety of interpretations for these dreams: that Olympias was pregnant before her marriage, indicated by the sealing of her womb; or that Alexander's father was Zeus. | On the day Alexander was born, Philip was preparing a siege on the city of Potidea on the peninsula of Chalcidice. | Ancient commentators were divided about whether the ambitious Olympias promulgated the story of Alexander's divine parentage, variously claiming that she had told Alexander, or that she dismissed the suggestion as impious. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0050784084014594555,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002383860293775797,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005078 | preceding |
Historiography Apart from a few inscriptions and fragments, texts written by people who actually knew Alexander or who gathered information from men who served with Alexander were all lost. Contemporaries who wrote accounts of his life included Alexander's campaign historian Callisthenes; Alexander's generals Ptolemy and Nearchus; Aristobulus, a junior officer on the campaigns; and Onesicritus, Alexander's chief helmsman. Their works are lost, but later works based on these original sources have survived. | 783_625 | contemporaries | Historiography Apart from a few inscriptions and fragments, texts written by people who actually knew Alexander or who gathered information from men who served with Alexander were all lost. | Their works are lost, but later works based on these original sources have survived. | Contemporaries who wrote accounts of his life included Alexander's campaign historian Callisthenes; Alexander's generals Ptolemy and Nearchus; Aristobulus, a junior officer on the campaigns; and Onesicritus, Alexander's chief helmsman. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0026349183171987534,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 31,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002635 | preceding |
Aelian writes of Alexander's visit to Troy where "Alexander garlanded the tomb of Achilles, and Hephaestion that of Patroclus, the latter hinting that he was a beloved of Alexander, in just the same way as Patroclus was of Achilles." Some modern historians (e.g., Robin Lane Fox) believe not only that Alexander's youthful relationship with Hephaestion was sexual, but that their sexual contacts may have continued into adulthood, which went against the social norms of at least some Greek cities, such as Athens, though some modern researchers have tentatively proposed that Macedonia (or at least the Macedonian court) may have been more tolerant of homosexuality between adults. Green argues that there is little evidence in ancient sources that Alexander had much carnal interest in women; he did not produce an heir until the very end of his life. However, Ogden calculates that Alexander, who impregnated his partners thrice in eight years, had a higher matrimonial record than his father at the same age. Two of these pregnancies — Stateira's and Barsine's — are of dubious legitimacy. | 783_475 | partners | Aelian writes of Alexander's visit to Troy where "Alexander garlanded the tomb of Achilles, and Hephaestion that of Patroclus, the latter hinting that he was a beloved of Alexander, in just the same way as Patroclus was of Achilles." Some modern historians (e.g., Robin Lane Fox) believe not only that Alexander's youthful relationship with Hephaestion was sexual, but that their sexual contacts may have continued into adulthood, which went against the social norms of at least some Greek cities, such as Athens, though some modern researchers have tentatively proposed that Macedonia (or at least the Macedonian court) may have been more tolerant of homosexuality between adults. Green argues that there is little evidence in ancient sources that Alexander had much carnal interest in women; he did not produce an heir until the very end of his life. | Two of these pregnancies — Stateira's and Barsine's — are of dubious legitimacy. | However, Ogden calculates that Alexander, who impregnated his partners thrice in eight years, had a higher matrimonial record than his father at the same age. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00029878775239922106,
"distance": 26,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 141,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 167,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0012477084528654814,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 148,
"gendered_word": "heir",
"word_pos": 167,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0026859771460294724,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 180,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 167,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002686 | trailing |
In the late 1970s, geologist Walter Alvarez and his father, Nobel Prize–winning scientist Luis Walter Alvarez, put forth their theory that the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction was caused by an impact event. The main evidence of such an impact was contained in a thin layer of clay present in the K–Pg boundary in Gubbio, Italy. The Alvarezes and colleagues reported that it contained an abnormally high concentration of iridium, a chemical element rare on earth but common in asteroids. Iridium levels in this layer were as much as 160 times above the background level. | 791_454 | colleagues | In the late 1970s, geologist Walter Alvarez and his father, Nobel Prize–winning scientist Luis Walter Alvarez, put forth their theory that the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction was caused by an impact event. The main evidence of such an impact was contained in a thin layer of clay present in the K–Pg boundary in Gubbio, Italy. | Iridium levels in this layer were as much as 160 times above the background level. | The Alvarezes and colleagues reported that it contained an abnormally high concentration of iridium, a chemical element rare on earth but common in asteroids. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.010820798575878143,
"distance": 58,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 10,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.010821 | preceding |
Adult anime may feature a slower pace or greater plot complexity that younger audiences may typically find unappealing, as well as adult themes and situations. A subset of adult anime works featuring pornographic elements are labeled "R18" in Japan, and are internationally known as hentai (originating from ). By contrast, some anime subgenres incorporate ecchi, sexual themes or undertones without depictions of sexual intercourse, as typified in the comedic or harem genres; due to its popularity among adolescent and adult anime enthusiasts, the inclusion of such elements is considered a form of fan service. Some genres explore homosexual romances, such as yaoi (male homosexuality) and yuri (female homosexuality). | 800_126 | enthusiasts | Adult anime may feature a slower pace or greater plot complexity that younger audiences may typically find unappealing, as well as adult themes and situations. A subset of adult anime works featuring pornographic elements are labeled "R18" in Japan, and are internationally known as hentai (originating from ). | Some genres explore homosexual romances, such as yaoi (male homosexuality) and yuri (female homosexuality). | By contrast, some anime subgenres incorporate ecchi, sexual themes or undertones without depictions of sexual intercourse, as typified in the comedic or harem genres; due to its popularity among adolescent and adult anime enthusiasts, the inclusion of such elements is considered a form of fan service. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002296606544405222,
"distance": 25,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 117,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 92,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0019134357571601868,
"distance": 31,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 123,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 92,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002297 | trailing |
The masculine singular nisbah ending is pronounced and is unstressed, but plural and feminine singular forms, i.e. when followed by a suffix, still sound as . Full endings, including case endings, occur when a clitic object or possessive suffix is added, e.g., 'us/our'. Informal short pronunciation
This is the pronunciation used by speakers of Modern Standard Arabic in extemporaneous speech, i.e. when producing new sentences rather than reading a prepared text. It is similar to formal short pronunciation except that the rules for dropping final vowels apply even when a clitic suffix is added. | 803_452 | speakers | The masculine singular nisbah ending is pronounced and is unstressed, but plural and feminine singular forms, i.e. when followed by a suffix, still sound as . Full endings, including case endings, occur when a clitic object or possessive suffix is added, e.g., 'us/our'. | It is similar to formal short pronunciation except that the rules for dropping final vowels apply even when a clitic suffix is added. | Informal short pronunciation
This is the pronunciation used by speakers of Modern Standard Arabic in extemporaneous speech, i.e. when producing new sentences rather than reading a prepared text. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0015782350674271584,
"distance": 52,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 16,
"gendered_word": "feminine",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001578 | preceding |
External links Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. | 808_588 | recipients | External links Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute | DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. | 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0003527345252223313,
"distance": 65,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 90,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 25,
"word_pos_tag": "VERB"
}
] | 0.000353 | trailing |
Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
Royal Engineers soldiers
Silent film directors
Silent film screenwriters | 808_589 | recipients | Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. | Thalberg Memorial Award
Royal Engineers soldiers
Silent film directors
Silent film screenwriters | DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00035005039535462856,
"distance": 65,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 23,
"word_pos_tag": "VERB"
}
] | 0.00035 | matching |
Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
Royal Engineers soldiers
Silent film directors
Silent film screenwriters | 808_589 | directors | Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. | Thalberg Memorial Award
Royal Engineers soldiers
Silent film directors
Silent film screenwriters | DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0003311792388558388,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 54,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0006827159086242318,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 81,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002699770499020815,
"distance": 15,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 103,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007914212765172124,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 110,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00017365391249768436,
"distance": 27,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 115,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00016346204211004078,
"distance": 46,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 134,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0001923239033203572,
"distance": 50,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 138,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.0027 | matching |
He also directed Have You Heard? (1942), a photographic dramatisation for Life magazine of the dangers of rumours during wartime. In 1943, he wrote a mystery story for Look, "The Murder of Monty Woolley", a sequence of captioned photographs inviting the reader to find clues to the murderer's identity; Hitchcock cast the performers as themselves, such as Woolley, Doris Merrick and make-up man Guy Pearce. Back in England, Hitchcock's mother Emma was severely ill; she died on 26 September 1942 at age 79. | 808_204 | performers | He also directed Have You Heard? (1942), a photographic dramatisation for Life magazine of the dangers of rumours during wartime. | Back in England, Hitchcock's mother Emma was severely ill; she died on 26 September 1942 at age 79. | In 1943, he wrote a mystery story for Look, "The Murder of Monty Woolley", a sequence of captioned photographs inviting the reader to find clues to the murderer's identity; Hitchcock cast the performers as themselves, such as Woolley, Doris Merrick and make-up man Guy Pearce. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00259073032066226,
"distance": 14,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 78,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 64,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005720568588003516,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 64,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002591 | trailing |
For example, if the clapperboard showed "Scene 23; Take 3", he would whisper "Woodford, Hampstead"Woodford being the terminus of the route 23 tram, and Hampstead the end of route 3. Henley's
Hitchcock told his parents that he wanted to be an engineer, and on 25 July 1913, he left St Ignatius and enrolled in night classes at the London County Council School of Engineering and Navigation in Poplar. In a book-length interview in 1962, he told François Truffaut that he had studied "mechanics, electricity, acoustics, and navigation". Then, on 12 December 1914, his father, who had been suffering from emphysema and kidney disease, died at the age of 52. | 808_50 | mechanics | For example, if the clapperboard showed "Scene 23; Take 3", he would whisper "Woodford, Hampstead"Woodford being the terminus of the route 23 tram, and Hampstead the end of route 3. Henley's
Hitchcock told his parents that he wanted to be an engineer, and on 25 July 1913, he left St Ignatius and enrolled in night classes at the London County Council School of Engineering and Navigation in Poplar. | Then, on 12 December 1914, his father, who had been suffering from emphysema and kidney disease, died at the age of 52. | In a book-length interview in 1962, he told François Truffaut that he had studied "mechanics, electricity, acoustics, and navigation". | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002183286938816309,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 118,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002183 | trailing |
Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
Royal Engineers soldiers
Silent film directors
Silent film screenwriters | 808_589 | producers | Alfred Hitchcock at the British Film Institute 1899 births
1980 deaths
20th-century English screenwriters
AFI Life Achievement Award recipients
Articles containing video clips
BAFTA fellows
British Army personnel of World War I
Cecil B. | Thalberg Memorial Award
Royal Engineers soldiers
Silent film directors
Silent film screenwriters | DeMille Award Golden Globe winners
Deaths from kidney failure
Directors Guild of America Award winners
Edgar Award winners
English emigrants to the United States
English expatriates in the United States
English film directors
English film producers
English male screenwriters
English people of Irish descent
English Roman Catholics
English television directors
English television producers
Film directors from London
Film directors from Los Angeles
Film producers from California
Film producers from London
German-language film directors
Horror film directors
Horror film producers
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military personnel from Essex
People educated at St Ignatius' College, Enfield
People from Bel Air, Los Angeles
People from Leytonstone
People with acquired American citizenship
People with multiple nationality
Recipients of the Irving G. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.043389610946178436,
"distance": 3,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 85,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0017634991090744734,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 107,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00040253164479508996,
"distance": 33,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 121,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00165412703063339,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 126,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00013155506167095155,
"distance": 54,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 142,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.04339 | matching |
Regional accents
In addition to the standard variety, in everyday life most Austrians speak one of a number of Upper German dialects. While strong forms of the various dialects are not fully mutually intelligible to northern Germans, communication is much easier in Bavaria, especially rural areas, where the Bavarian dialect still predominates as the mother tongue. The Central Austro-Bavarian dialects are more intelligible to speakers of Standard German than the Southern Austro-Bavarian dialects of Tyrol. Viennese, the Austro-Bavarian dialect of Vienna, is seen for many in Germany as quintessentially Austrian. | 825_45 | speakers | Regional accents
In addition to the standard variety, in everyday life most Austrians speak one of a number of Upper German dialects. While strong forms of the various dialects are not fully mutually intelligible to northern Germans, communication is much easier in Bavaria, especially rural areas, where the Bavarian dialect still predominates as the mother tongue. | Viennese, the Austro-Bavarian dialect of Vienna, is seen for many in Germany as quintessentially Austrian. | The Central Austro-Bavarian dialects are more intelligible to speakers of Standard German than the Southern Austro-Bavarian dialects of Tyrol. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.006608068011701107,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 60,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006608 | matching |
Attila in Germanic heroic legend
Some histories and chronicles describe Attila as a great and noble king, and he plays major roles in three Norse texts: Atlakviða, Volsunga saga, and Atlamál. The Polish Chronicle represents Attila's name as Aquila. Frutolf of Michelsberg and Otto of Freising pointed out that some songs as "vulgar fables" and made Theoderic the Great, Attila and Ermanaric contemporaries, when any reader of Jordanes knew that this was not the case. This refers to the so-called historical poems about Dietrich von Bern (Theoderic), in which Etzel (German for Attila) is Dietrich's refuge in exile from his wicked uncle Ermenrich (Ermanaric). | 841_209 | contemporaries | Attila in Germanic heroic legend
Some histories and chronicles describe Attila as a great and noble king, and he plays major roles in three Norse texts: Atlakviða, Volsunga saga, and Atlamál. The Polish Chronicle represents Attila's name as Aquila. | This refers to the so-called historical poems about Dietrich von Bern (Theoderic), in which Etzel (German for Attila) is Dietrich's refuge in exile from his wicked uncle Ermenrich (Ermanaric). | Frutolf of Michelsberg and Otto of Freising pointed out that some songs as "vulgar fables" and made Theoderic the Great, Attila and Ermanaric contemporaries, when any reader of Jordanes knew that this was not the case. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0013374424306675792,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 122,
"gendered_word": "uncle",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001337 | trailing |
His brother Dengizich attempted a renewed invasion across the Danube in 468 AD, but was defeated at the Battle of Bassianae by the Ostrogoths. Dengizich was killed by Roman-Gothic general Anagast the following year, after which the Hunnic dominion ended. Attila's many children and relatives are known by name and some even by deeds, but soon valid genealogical sources all but dried up, and there seems to be no verifiable way to trace Attila's descendants. This has not stopped many genealogists from attempting to reconstruct a valid line of descent for various medieval rulers. | 841_183 | relatives | His brother Dengizich attempted a renewed invasion across the Danube in 468 AD, but was defeated at the Battle of Bassianae by the Ostrogoths. Dengizich was killed by Roman-Gothic general Anagast the following year, after which the Hunnic dominion ended. | This has not stopped many genealogists from attempting to reconstruct a valid line of descent for various medieval rulers. | Attila's many children and relatives are known by name and some even by deeds, but soon valid genealogical sources all but dried up, and there seems to be no verifiable way to trace Attila's descendants. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0016663800925016403,
"distance": 50,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 1,
"gendered_word": "brother",
"word_pos": 51,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001666 | preceding |
This refers to the so-called historical poems about Dietrich von Bern (Theoderic), in which Etzel (German for Attila) is Dietrich's refuge in exile from his wicked uncle Ermenrich (Ermanaric). Etzel is most prominent in the poems Dietrichs Flucht and the Rabenschlacht. Etzel also appears as Kriemhild's second noble husband in the Nibelungenlied, in which Kriemhild causes the destruction of both the Hunnish kingdom and that of her Burgundian relatives. Early modern and modern reception
In 1812, Ludwig van Beethoven conceived the idea of writing an opera about Attila and approached August von Kotzebue to write the libretto. | 841_212 | relatives | This refers to the so-called historical poems about Dietrich von Bern (Theoderic), in which Etzel (German for Attila) is Dietrich's refuge in exile from his wicked uncle Ermenrich (Ermanaric). Etzel is most prominent in the poems Dietrichs Flucht and the Rabenschlacht. | Early modern and modern reception
In 1812, Ludwig van Beethoven conceived the idea of writing an opera about Attila and approached August von Kotzebue to write the libretto. | Etzel also appears as Kriemhild's second noble husband in the Nibelungenlied, in which Kriemhild causes the destruction of both the Hunnish kingdom and that of her Burgundian relatives. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0018587950617074966,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 34,
"gendered_word": "uncle",
"word_pos": 82,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.010959777049720287,
"distance": 21,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 61,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 82,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.01096 | matching |
Alexander, still lives here, but his wife has since died of what he believes to be injuries she sustained in the rape. He does not recognise Alex but gives him shelter and questions him about the conditioning he has undergone. Alexander and his colleagues, all highly critical of the government, plan to use Alex as a symbol of state brutality and thus prevent the incumbent government from being re-elected. Alex inadvertently reveals that he was the ringleader of the home invasion; he is removed from the cottage and locked in an upper-storey bedroom as a relentless barrage of classical music plays over speakers. | 843_46 | colleagues | Alexander, still lives here, but his wife has since died of what he believes to be injuries she sustained in the rape. He does not recognise Alex but gives him shelter and questions him about the conditioning he has undergone. | Alex inadvertently reveals that he was the ringleader of the home invasion; he is removed from the cottage and locked in an upper-storey bedroom as a relentless barrage of classical music plays over speakers. | Alexander and his colleagues, all highly critical of the government, plan to use Alex as a symbol of state brutality and thus prevent the incumbent government from being re-elected. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.007287738379091024,
"distance": 39,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 47,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.007288 | preceding |
Lawrence's novel with A Clockwork Orange: "We all suffer from the popular desire to make the known notorious. The book I am best known for, or only known for, is a novel I am prepared to repudiate: written a quarter of a century ago, a jeu d'esprit knocked off for money in three weeks, it became known as the raw material for a film which seemed to glorify sex and violence. The film made it easy for readers of the book to misunderstand what it was about, and the misunderstanding will pursue me until I die. I should not have written the book because of this danger of misinterpretation, and the same may be said of Lawrence and Lady Chatterley's Lover." | 843_189 | readers | Lawrence's novel with A Clockwork Orange: "We all suffer from the popular desire to make the known notorious. The book I am best known for, or only known for, is a novel I am prepared to repudiate: written a quarter of a century ago, a jeu d'esprit knocked off for money in three weeks, it became known as the raw material for a film which seemed to glorify sex and violence. | I should not have written the book because of this danger of misinterpretation, and the same may be said of Lawrence and Lady Chatterley's Lover." | The film made it easy for readers of the book to misunderstand what it was about, and the misunderstanding will pursue me until I die. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0016776829725131392,
"distance": 44,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 131,
"gendered_word": "Lady",
"word_pos": 87,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001678 | trailing |
He invented the veneer lathe (which made possible the production of modern plywood) and started work on the torpedo. In 1842, the family joined him in the city. Now prosperous, his parents were able to send Nobel to private tutors and the boy excelled in his studies, particularly in chemistry and languages, achieving fluency in English, French, German and Russian. For 18 months, from 1841 to 1842, Nobel went to the only school he ever attended as a child, in Stockholm. | 851_19 | tutors | He invented the veneer lathe (which made possible the production of modern plywood) and started work on the torpedo. In 1842, the family joined him in the city. | For 18 months, from 1841 to 1842, Nobel went to the only school he ever attended as a child, in Stockholm. | Now prosperous, his parents were able to send Nobel to private tutors and the boy excelled in his studies, particularly in chemistry and languages, achieving fluency in English, French, German and Russian. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0017656006384640932,
"distance": 3,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 48,
"gendered_word": "boy",
"word_pos": 45,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001766 | matching |
Since the deciding bodies he had chosen were more concerned with the former, the prizes went to scientists more often than engineers, technicians or other inventors. Sweden's central bank Sveriges Riksbank celebrated its 300th anniversary in 1968 by donating a large sum of money to the Nobel Foundation to be used to set up a sixth prize in the field of economics in honor of Alfred Nobel. In 2001, Alfred Nobel's great-great-nephew, Peter Nobel (born 1931), asked the Bank of Sweden to differentiate its award to economists given "in Alfred Nobel's memory" from the five other awards. This request added to the controversy over whether the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel is actually a legitimate "Nobel Prize". | 851_88 | economists | Since the deciding bodies he had chosen were more concerned with the former, the prizes went to scientists more often than engineers, technicians or other inventors. Sweden's central bank Sveriges Riksbank celebrated its 300th anniversary in 1968 by donating a large sum of money to the Nobel Foundation to be used to set up a sixth prize in the field of economics in honor of Alfred Nobel. | This request added to the controversy over whether the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel is actually a legitimate "Nobel Prize". | In 2001, Alfred Nobel's great-great-nephew, Peter Nobel (born 1931), asked the Bank of Sweden to differentiate its award to economists given "in Alfred Nobel's memory" from the five other awards. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001249336521141231,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 82,
"gendered_word": "nephew",
"word_pos": 101,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001249 | matching |
Unsure of his future, he contemplated returning to London to complete his studies, but decided to return to Boston as a teacher. His father helped him set up his private practice by contacting Gardiner Greene Hubbard, the president of the Clarke School for the Deaf for a recommendation. Teaching his father's system, in October 1872, Alexander Bell opened his "School of Vocal Physiology and Mechanics of Speech" in Boston, which attracted a large number of deaf pupils, with his first class numbering 30 students. While he was working as a private tutor, one of his pupils was Helen Keller, who came to him as a young child unable to see, hear, or speak. | 852_102 | mechanics | Unsure of his future, he contemplated returning to London to complete his studies, but decided to return to Boston as a teacher. His father helped him set up his private practice by contacting Gardiner Greene Hubbard, the president of the Clarke School for the Deaf for a recommendation. | While he was working as a private tutor, one of his pupils was Helen Keller, who came to him as a young child unable to see, hear, or speak. | Teaching his father's system, in October 1872, Alexander Bell opened his "School of Vocal Physiology and Mechanics of Speech" in Boston, which attracted a large number of deaf pupils, with his first class numbering 30 students. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0005168604548089206,
"distance": 47,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 26,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007556906202808022,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.000756 | matching |
Born as just "Alexander Bell", at age 10, he made a plea to his father to have a middle name like his two brothers. For his 11th birthday, his father acquiesced and allowed him to adopt the name "Graham", chosen out of respect for Alexander Graham, a Canadian being treated by his father who had become a family friend. To close relatives and friends he remained "Aleck". Bell and his siblings attended a Presbyterian Church in their youth. | 852_15 | relatives | Born as just "Alexander Bell", at age 10, he made a plea to his father to have a middle name like his two brothers. For his 11th birthday, his father acquiesced and allowed him to adopt the name "Graham", chosen out of respect for Alexander Graham, a Canadian being treated by his father who had become a family friend. | Bell and his siblings attended a Presbyterian Church in their youth. | To close relatives and friends he remained "Aleck". | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0009700636728666723,
"distance": 54,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 18,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000765105418395251,
"distance": 37,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 35,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001631148043088615,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001631 | matching |
He also criticized educational practices that segregated deaf children rather than integrated them fulling into mainstream classrooms. The paper did not propose sterilization of deaf people or prohibition on intermarriage, noting that "We cannot dictate to men and women whom they should marry and natural selection no longer influences mankind to any great extent." A review of Bell's "Memoir upon the Formation of a Deaf Variety of the Human Race" appearing in an 1885 issue of the "American Annals of the Deaf and Dumb" states that "Dr. Bell does not advocate legislative interference with the marriages of the deaf for several reasons one of which is that the results of such marriages have not yet been sufficiently investigated." The article goes on to say that "the editorial remarks based thereon did injustice to the author." The paper's author concludes by saying "A wiser way to prevent the extension of hereditary deafness, it seems to us, would be to continue the investigations which Dr. Bell has so admirable begun until the laws of the transmission of the tendency to deafness are fully understood, and then by explaining those laws to the pupils of our schools to lead them to choose their partners in marriage in such a way that deaf-mute offspring will not be the result." Historians have noted that Bell explicitly opposed laws regulating marriage, and never mentioned sterilization in any of his writings. | 852_356 | partners | He also criticized educational practices that segregated deaf children rather than integrated them fulling into mainstream classrooms. The paper did not propose sterilization of deaf people or prohibition on intermarriage, noting that "We cannot dictate to men and women whom they should marry and natural selection no longer influences mankind to any great extent." | Historians have noted that Bell explicitly opposed laws regulating marriage, and never mentioned sterilization in any of his writings. | A review of Bell's "Memoir upon the Formation of a Deaf Variety of the Human Race" appearing in an 1885 issue of the "American Annals of the Deaf and Dumb" states that "Dr. Bell does not advocate legislative interference with the marriages of the deaf for several reasons one of which is that the results of such marriages have not yet been sufficiently investigated." The article goes on to say that "the editorial remarks based thereon did injustice to the author." The paper's author concludes by saying "A wiser way to prevent the extension of hereditary deafness, it seems to us, would be to continue the investigations which Dr. Bell has so admirable begun until the laws of the transmission of the tendency to deafness are fully understood, and then by explaining those laws to the pupils of our schools to lead them to choose their partners in marriage in such a way that deaf-mute offspring will not be the result." | [
{
"attention_score": 0.000265102949924767,
"distance": 182,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 40,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 222,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00016849572421051562,
"distance": 180,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 42,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 222,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000265 | preceding |
Johny Srouji (senior vice president – Hardware Technologies) Sabih Khan (senior vice president – Operations) Board of directors
As of January 20, 2023, the board of directors of Apple Inc. includes: | 856_367 | directors | Johny Srouji (senior vice president – Hardware Technologies) Sabih Khan (senior vice president – Operations) | includes: | Board of directors
As of January 20, 2023, the board of directors of Apple Inc. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0019829003140330315,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "Khan",
"word_pos": 21,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002871673321351409,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "Khan",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002872 | preceding |
The majority of employees work within the service sector, predominantly in public administration, education and health. Almost 19% of employment is within the public sector. Aberdeenshire's economy remains closely linked to Aberdeen City's and the North Sea oil industry, with many employees in oil-related jobs. The average monthly unemployment (claimant count) rate for Aberdeenshire in 2011 was 1.5%. | 857_66 | employees | The majority of employees work within the service sector, predominantly in public administration, education and health. Almost 19% of employment is within the public sector. | The average monthly unemployment (claimant count) rate for Aberdeenshire in 2011 was 1.5%. | Aberdeenshire's economy remains closely linked to Aberdeen City's and the North Sea oil industry, with many employees in oil-related jobs. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0019312001531943679,
"distance": 59,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "count",
"word_pos": 3,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.012297170236706734,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "count",
"word_pos": 49,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.012297 | trailing |
Women served on the Union hospital ship Red Rover and nursed Union and Confederate troops at field hospitals. Mary Edwards Walker, the only woman ever to receive the Medal of Honor, served in the Union Army and was given the medal for her efforts to treat the wounded during the war. Her name was deleted from the Army Medal of Honor Roll in 1917 (along with over 900 other Medal of Honor recipients); however, it was restored in 1977. Naval tactics | 863_308 | recipients | Women served on the Union hospital ship Red Rover and nursed Union and Confederate troops at field hospitals. Mary Edwards Walker, the only woman ever to receive the Medal of Honor, served in the Union Army and was given the medal for her efforts to treat the wounded during the war. | Naval tactics | Her name was deleted from the Army Medal of Honor Roll in 1917 (along with over 900 other Medal of Honor recipients); however, it was restored in 1977. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0029285054188221693,
"distance": 77,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 0,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 77,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009719104273244739,
"distance": 52,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 25,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 77,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002929 | preceding |
Warhol also earned street credibility and graffiti artist Fab Five Freddy paid homage to Warhol by painting an entire train with Campbell soup cans. Warhol was also being criticized for becoming merely a "business artist". Critics panned his 1980 exhibition Ten Portraits of Jews of the Twentieth Century at the Jewish Museum in Manhattan, which Warhol—who was uninterested in Judaism and Jews—had described in his diary as "They're going to sell." In hindsight, however, some critics have come to view Warhol's superficiality and commerciality as "the most brilliant mirror of our times", contending that "Warhol had captured something irresistible about the zeitgeist of American culture in the 1970s." In 1981, Warhol worked on a project with Peter Sellars and Lewis Allen that would create a traveling stage show called, A No Man Show, with a life-sized animatronic robot in the exact image of Warhol. | 864_132 | jews | Warhol also earned street credibility and graffiti artist Fab Five Freddy paid homage to Warhol by painting an entire train with Campbell soup cans. Warhol was also being criticized for becoming merely a "business artist". | In 1981, Warhol worked on a project with Peter Sellars and Lewis Allen that would create a traveling stage show called, A No Man Show, with a life-sized animatronic robot in the exact image of Warhol. | Critics panned his 1980 exhibition Ten Portraits of Jews of the Twentieth Century at the Jewish Museum in Manhattan, which Warhol—who was uninterested in Judaism and Jews—had described in his diary as "They're going to sell." In hindsight, however, some critics have come to view Warhol's superficiality and commerciality as "the most brilliant mirror of our times", contending that "Warhol had captured something irresistible about the zeitgeist of American culture in the 1970s." | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0012362927664071321,
"distance": 108,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Man",
"word_pos": 47,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0015844808658584952,
"distance": 87,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Man",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001584 | trailing |
Gould was the most photographed subject of Warhol's later career and worked as an American film executive at Paramount Pictures where he was responsible for films including John Travolta's Urban Cowboy. His boyfriend of 12 years was Jed Johnson, whom he met in 1968, and who later achieved fame as an interior designer. The fact that Warhol's homosexuality influenced his work and shaped his relationship to the art world is a major subject of scholarship on the artist and is an issue that Warhol himself addressed in interviews, in conversation with his contemporaries, and in his publications (e.g., Popism: The Warhol 1960s). Throughout his career, Warhol produced erotic photography and drawings of male nudes. | 864_383 | contemporaries | Gould was the most photographed subject of Warhol's later career and worked as an American film executive at Paramount Pictures where he was responsible for films including John Travolta's Urban Cowboy. His boyfriend of 12 years was Jed Johnson, whom he met in 1968, and who later achieved fame as an interior designer. | Throughout his career, Warhol produced erotic photography and drawings of male nudes. | The fact that Warhol's homosexuality influenced his work and shaped his relationship to the art world is a major subject of scholarship on the artist and is an issue that Warhol himself addressed in interviews, in conversation with his contemporaries, and in his publications (e.g., Popism: The Warhol 1960s). | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00002945747837657109,
"distance": 65,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 35,
"gendered_word": "boyfriend",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0002475923392921686,
"distance": 27,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 127,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000248 | trailing |
Anchored by the restoration of noted architect John Eberson's historic 1938 Silver Theatre, it features 32,000 square feet of new construction housing two stadium theatres, office and meeting space, and reception and exhibit areas. The AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center presents film and video programming, augmented by filmmaker interviews, panels, discussions, and musical performances. The AFI Directing Workshop for Women
The Directing Workshop for Women is a training program committed to educating and mentoring participants in an effort to increase the number of women working professionally in screen directing. In this tuition-free program, each participant is required to complete a short film by the end of the year-long program. | 869_68 | participants | Anchored by the restoration of noted architect John Eberson's historic 1938 Silver Theatre, it features 32,000 square feet of new construction housing two stadium theatres, office and meeting space, and reception and exhibit areas. The AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center presents film and video programming, augmented by filmmaker interviews, panels, discussions, and musical performances. | In this tuition-free program, each participant is required to complete a short film by the end of the year-long program. | The AFI Directing Workshop for Women
The Directing Workshop for Women is a training program committed to educating and mentoring participants in an effort to increase the number of women working professionally in screen directing. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0009181367931887507,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 70,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 86,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002172483829781413,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 76,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 86,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0021798633970320225,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 95,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 86,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00218 | trailing |
To elicit realistic performances from his actresses, the director had them live in a real factory during the shoot, eat the factory food and call each other by their character names. He would use similar methods with his performers throughout his career. During production, the actress playing the leader of the factory workers, Yōko Yaguchi, was chosen by her colleagues to present their demands to the director. She and Kurosawa were constantly at odds, and it was through these arguments that the two paradoxically became close. | 872_64 | colleagues | To elicit realistic performances from his actresses, the director had them live in a real factory during the shoot, eat the factory food and call each other by their character names. He would use similar methods with his performers throughout his career. | She and Kurosawa were constantly at odds, and it was through these arguments that the two paradoxically became close. | During production, the actress playing the leader of the factory workers, Yōko Yaguchi, was chosen by her colleagues to present their demands to the director. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.008027179166674614,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 50,
"gendered_word": "actress",
"word_pos": 66,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.008027 | matching |
End of preview. Expand
in Dataset Viewer.
No dataset card yet
- Downloads last month
- 24