R & A: The man is watching sports at home on his new television.
no
Q: Premise: "A man starts walking towards a bowling lane."
Hypothesis: "Appearing to be winding up for a bowl."
Do we know that the hypothesis entailed by the premise?

R & A: The presence of cars does not mean that the people are necessarily walking towards their parked car.
it is not possible to tell
Q: Given the sentence "People are walking down a narrow street that is lined with cars." is it true that "People walking towards their parked car."?

R & A: You can read a newspaper without it being the sports section.
it is not possible to tell
Q: Given the sentence "Someone on a bus reading a newspaper." is it true that "Someone on a bus reading the sports section."?

R & A: People who are paralyzed would have a hard time kicking a ball.
no
Q:
Test for natural language inference.
Premise: "Some people are kicking a white ball on a beach."
Hypothesis: "The people are paralyzed."
Is the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
Options:
- yes
- no
- it is not possible to tell