QUESTION: Given the sentence "Two young children are sitting on a statue of a lion." is it true that "The children are on vacation."?

SOLUTION: Let's solve this gradually. Children on a vacation don't necessarily imply be sitting on a statue.
Answer is it is not possible to tell.


QUESTION: Premise: "A child swims with a woman."
Hypothesis: "A child does the backstroke."
Do we know that the hypothesis entailed by the premise?

SOLUTION: Let's solve this gradually. Because someone is swimming doesn't mean they are doing the backstroke.
Answer is it is not possible to tell.


QUESTION: Premise: "A girl looking through binoculars."
Hypothesis: "The girl is looking through a telescope at the moon."
Do we know that the hypothesis entailed by the premise?

SOLUTION: Let's solve this gradually. The two items; binoculars and telescope are very different and have different uses.
Answer is no.


QUESTION: Given the sentence "A trained police dog sits next to his handler in front of the police van." is it true that "A police dog and his handler are waiting for suspects next to the van."?

SOLUTION:
Let's solve this gradually. A dog sits next to his handler and may not be waiting for suspects.
Answer is it is not possible to tell.