Q: Premise: "A man driving an ice cream truck past apartment buildings."
Hypothesis: "A man goes to a new neighborhood to sell ice cream."
Is the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
Options:
- yes
- it is not possible to tell
- no
A: Nothing says the man drove the truck past apartment building to sell ice cream.
The answer is it is not possible to tell.

Q: Given the sentence "Two students try to walk a tightrope on a campus quad." is it true that "But one falls off."?
A: The two students shuffle across a tightrope suspended fifty feet in the air.
The answer is it is not possible to tell.

Q: Premise: "Six girls are sitting together laughing and playing tambourines."
Hypothesis: "A group of girls are sleeping."
Do we know that the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
A: If people are laughing and playing tambourines they cannot also be sleeping.
The answer is no.

Q: Test for natural language inference.
Premise: "A basketball player leaps with the ball while opponents try to block him."
Hypothesis: "A baseball player standing in the batters box."
Is the hypothesis entailed by the premise?
Options:
- yes
- no
- it is not possible to tell
A:
The standing baseball player contradicts the basketball play who leaps in first sentence.
The answer is no.