Q: Can we conclude from "A male senior citizen is drinking liquor straight from the bottle." that "A male senior citizen is trying to drink away his problems."?
Options:
- yes
- no
- it is not possible to tell
A: it is not possible to tell
Chain-of-thought: The man may just be drinking for fun and not attempting to drink away his problems.

Q: Can we conclude from "A group eating lunch on break." that "Workers on lunch."?
Options:
- yes
- no
- it is not possible to tell
A: it is not possible to tell
Chain-of-thought: Eating lunch on a break does not imply the people eating are workers.

Q: Premise: "Four men running a marathon."
Hypothesis: "Men are running as fast as they can."
Do we know that the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
A: it is not possible to tell
Chain-of-thought: Not all marathon runners are trying to run as fast as they can.

Q: Test for natural language inference.
Premise: "Two dogs wrestle in the snow."
Hypothesis: "Two puppies enjoy the first snow of winter."
Is the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
Options:
- yes
- no
- it is not possible to tell
A: it is not possible to tell
Chain-of-thought:
We learned they were puppies experiencing the first snow of the season.