Q: Can we conclude from "Some children in lab coats are pretending to do surgery on a dummy." that "Some children are pretending that they are putting out a fire."?
Options:
- yes
- no
- it is not possible to tell
A: no
Chain-of-thought: Ones can be pretending that they are either doing surgery or putting out a fire.

Q: Premise: "The racing dog has a muzzle and is wearing striped jersey# 8."
Hypothesis: "The dogs are racing."
Is the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
Options:
- yes
- it is not possible to tell
- no
A: it is not possible to tell
Chain-of-thought: A single dog in costume does not mean the dogs are there to be racing.

Q: Premise: "A group of people wait in line in front of a counter."
Hypothesis: "The people all want to order soup."
Is the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
Options:
- yes
- it is not possible to tell
- no
A: it is not possible to tell
Chain-of-thought: They might not want to order. Soup isn't the only type of food.

Q: Test for natural language inference.
Premise: "A baseball player slides to the base."
Hypothesis: "A football player beats up the baseball player."
Is the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
Options:
- yes
- no
- it is not possible to tell
A: no
Chain-of-thought:
A baseball player can not slide to the base and get beat up at the same time.