before_sent
stringlengths
0
50.4k
before_sent_with_intent
stringlengths
10
50.5k
after_sent
stringlengths
0
50.6k
labels
stringclasses
5 values
confidence
stringlengths
5
10
doc_id
stringlengths
2
10
revision_depth
stringclasses
5 values
According to ICOMOS (see references), the NHCC ’ s profile report, it lists over 4000 heritage sites in Zambia, including: historic/architectural/buildings (over 384 sites) historic sites (over 180 sites) anthropological sites (over 189 sites) engineering industrial structures (over 62 sites) archaeological sites (over 2000 sites) geomorphological sites, geophysical sites, palaeontological, ecology and other sites.
<fluency> According to ICOMOS (see references), the NHCC ’ s profile report, it lists over 4000 heritage sites in Zambia, including: historic/architectural/buildings (over 384 sites) historic sites (over 180 sites) anthropological sites (over 189 sites) engineering industrial structures (over 62 sites) archaeological sites (over 2000 sites) geomorphological sites, geophysical sites, palaeontological, ecology and other sites.
According to ICOMOS (see references), the NHCC ' s profile report, it lists over 4000 heritage sites in Zambia, including: historic/architectural/buildings (over 384 sites) historic sites (over 180 sites) anthropological sites (over 189 sites) engineering industrial structures (over 62 sites) archaeological sites (over 2000 sites) geomorphological sites, geophysical sites, palaeontological, ecology and other sites.
fluency
0.9992167
9645349
2
However, only about 35\% of the country ’ s land area has been adequately surveyed for cultural heritage and, due to a shortage of funds, the condition of most of the listed sites is not known, however, the Commission with the assistance from Government has been making strides to ensure more sites are surveyed and opened to the public.
<fluency> However, only about 35\% of the country ’ s land area has been adequately surveyed for cultural heritage and, due to a shortage of funds, the condition of most of the listed sites is not known, however, the Commission with the assistance from Government has been making strides to ensure more sites are surveyed and opened to the public.
However, only about 35\% of the country ' s land area has been adequately surveyed for cultural heritage and, due to a shortage of funds, the condition of most of the listed sites is not known, however, the Commission with the assistance from Government has been making strides to ensure more sites are surveyed and opened to the public.
fluency
0.9989568
9645349
2
Victoria Falls Trust Area Archaeological Sites, Livingstone — 5.6 km west of town on north side of Sesheke road, Early to Later Stone Age sites which are the key for determining the Stone Age cultural sequence in the Upper Zambezi Valley Zawi Hill Rock Paintings, 32km north of Chipata near Kamukwe Village.
<fluency> Victoria Falls Trust Area Archaeological Sites, Livingstone — 5.6 km west of town on north side of Sesheke road, Early to Later Stone Age sites which are the key for determining the Stone Age cultural sequence in the Upper Zambezi Valley Zawi Hill Rock Paintings, 32km north of Chipata near Kamukwe Village.
Victoria Falls Trust Area Archaeological Sites, Livingstone — 5.6 km west of town on north side of Sesheke road, Early to Later Stone Age sites which are the key for determining the Stone Age cultural sequence in the Upper Zambezi Valley Zawi Hill Rock Paintings, 32 km north of Chipata near Kamukwe Village.
fluency
0.9961718
9645349
2
Fort Monze — 1890s, one of the earliest colonial police posts, 12km SSW of Monze.
<fluency> Fort Monze — 1890s, one of the earliest colonial police posts, 12km SSW of Monze.
Fort Monze — 1890s, one of the earliest colonial police posts, 12 km SSW of Monze.
fluency
0.99879825
9645349
2
Fort Young 21km SSE of Chipata on the Nsadzu-Mpezeni road at 13°50' S 32°40' E. Mpongwe Fortified Camp, Mpongwe, consisting of a raised bank and double ditch constructed during a period of raiding into the area by the neighbours of the Lima people, probably about 1870 at 13°31' S 28°9' E. Niamkolo Church, Mpulungu — the oldest surviving church building in Zambia, dating from 1895, near Mpulungu on Lake Tanganyika.
<fluency> Fort Young 21km SSE of Chipata on the Nsadzu-Mpezeni road at 13°50' S 32°40' E. Mpongwe Fortified Camp, Mpongwe, consisting of a raised bank and double ditch constructed during a period of raiding into the area by the neighbours of the Lima people, probably about 1870 at 13°31' S 28°9' E. Niamkolo Church, Mpulungu — the oldest surviving church building in Zambia, dating from 1895, near Mpulungu on Lake Tanganyika.
Fort Young 21 km SSE of Chipata on the Nsadzu-Mpezeni road at 13°50' S 32°40' E. Mpongwe Fortified Camp, Mpongwe, consisting of a raised bank and double ditch constructed during a period of raiding into the area by the neighbours of the Lima people, probably about 1870 at 13°31' S 28°9' E. Niamkolo Church, Mpulungu — the oldest surviving church building in Zambia, dating from 1895, near Mpulungu on Lake Tanganyika.
fluency
0.99715424
9645349
2
On the Lovu or Lufubu River 6.4 km upstream from Lake Tanganyika at 8°35' S 30°45' E. Chambeshi Monument — located near the north end of Chambeshi Bridge at the spot where German East African forces agreed a cease-fire on 14 November 1918 marking the end of World War I. Collier Monument — to prospector William Collier ’ s 1902 discovery of copper ore at the Roan Antelope Mine in Luanshya.
<fluency> On the Lovu or Lufubu River 6.4 km upstream from Lake Tanganyika at 8°35' S 30°45' E. Chambeshi Monument — located near the north end of Chambeshi Bridge at the spot where German East African forces agreed a cease-fire on 14 November 1918 marking the end of World War I. Collier Monument — to prospector William Collier ’ s 1902 discovery of copper ore at the Roan Antelope Mine in Luanshya.
On the Lovu or Lufubu River 6.4 km upstream from Lake Tanganyika at 8°35' S 30°45' E. Chambeshi Monument — located near the north end of Chambeshi Bridge at the spot where German East African forces agreed a cease-fire on 14 November 1918 marking the end of World War I. Collier Monument — to prospector William Collier ' s 1902 discovery of copper ore at the Roan Antelope Mine in Luanshya.
fluency
0.9993161
9645349
2
Kota Kota Penisnula in Gwembe Valley, Southern Province Barotse Plains Cultural Landscape in Mongu.
<meaning-changed> Kota Kota Penisnula in Gwembe Valley, Southern Province Barotse Plains Cultural Landscape in Mongu.
Kota Kota Peninsula in Gwembe Valley, Southern Province Barotse Plains Cultural Landscape in Mongu.
meaning-changed
0.8902972
9645349
2
Western Province Lunsemfwa Wonder Gorge and Bell Point: Mkushi District at the confluence of the Lunsemfwa and Mkushi Rivers at 14°39' S 29°07' E. About 75 km east-southeast of Kabwe, Zambia, the Lunsemfwa River cuts a 500m deep gash, known as The Wonder Gorge, through the lip of the Muchinga Escarpment (viewed from Bell ’ s Point).
<fluency> Western Province Lunsemfwa Wonder Gorge and Bell Point: Mkushi District at the confluence of the Lunsemfwa and Mkushi Rivers at 14°39' S 29°07' E. About 75 km east-southeast of Kabwe, Zambia, the Lunsemfwa River cuts a 500m deep gash, known as The Wonder Gorge, through the lip of the Muchinga Escarpment (viewed from Bell ’ s Point).
Western Province Lunsemfwa Wonder Gorge and Bell Point: Mkushi District at the confluence of the Lunsemfwa and Mkushi Rivers at 14°39' S 29°07' E. About 75 km east-southeast of Kabwe, Zambia, the Lunsemfwa River cuts a 500m deep gash, known as The Wonder Gorge, through the lip of the Muchinga Escarpment (viewed from Bell ' s Point).
fluency
0.9991714
9645349
2
The antenna atop the Taipei 101 skyscraper, the world ’ s tallest building, would just protrude above the rim of this gorge.
<fluency> The antenna atop the Taipei 101 skyscraper, the world ’ s tallest building, would just protrude above the rim of this gorge.
The antenna atop the Taipei 101 skyscraper, the world ' s tallest building, would just protrude above the rim of this gorge.
fluency
0.9993549
9645349
2
Border states or European buffer states was a political term used in the West before World War II,
<fluency> Border states or European buffer states was a political term used in the West before World War II,
Border states , or European buffer states was a political term used in the West before World War II,
fluency
0.99937636
964610
1
Border states or European buffer states was a political term used in the West before World War II, and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
<coherence> Border states or European buffer states was a political term used in the West before World War II, and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
Border states or European buffer states , were the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
coherence
0.9850935
964610
1
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
<fluency> and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
fluency
0.9991629
964610
1
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
<fluency> and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
fluency
0.9991732
964610
1
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
<clarity> and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the interwar period, the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
clarity
0.9988827
964610
1
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
<fluency> and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy , which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
fluency
0.99913114
964610
1
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
<clarity> and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting these nations in defense against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
and referring to the European nations that won their independence from the Russian Empire after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the treaty of Brest-Litovsk , and ultimately the defeat of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in World War I. During the 20th century interwar period the nations of Western Europe implemented a border states policy which aimed at uniting them in protection against the Soviet Union and communist expansionism.
clarity
0.99779886
964610
1
The border states were interchangeably Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania , and, until their annexation into the Soviet Union, short-lived Belarus and Ukraine.
<fluency> The border states were interchangeably Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania , and, until their annexation into the Soviet Union, short-lived Belarus and Ukraine.
The border states were interchangeably Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and, until their annexation into the Soviet Union, short-lived Belarus and Ukraine.
fluency
0.9993654
964610
1
The border states were now regarded as a cordon sanitaire against the spread of communism beyond Soviet Russia,..." This policy was very successful.
<fluency> The border states were now regarded as a cordon sanitaire against the spread of communism beyond Soviet Russia,..." This policy was very successful.
. The border states were now regarded as a cordon sanitaire against the spread of communism beyond Soviet Russia,..." This policy was very successful.
fluency
0.9993819
964610
1
The border states were now regarded as a cordon sanitaire against the spread of communism beyond Soviet Russia,..." This policy was very successful.
<fluency> The border states were now regarded as a cordon sanitaire against the spread of communism beyond Soviet Russia,..." This policy was very successful.
The border states were now regarded as a cordon sanitaire against the spread of communism beyond Soviet Russia,..." The policy was very successful.
fluency
0.99925894
964610
1
At the time, the Soviet Union's foreign policy was driven by the trotskyist idea of permanent revolution, the end goal of which was to spread communism worldwide through perpetual warfare.
<clarity> At the time, the Soviet Union's foreign policy was driven by the trotskyist idea of permanent revolution, the end goal of which was to spread communism worldwide through perpetual warfare.
At the time, Soviet foreign policy was driven by the trotskyist idea of permanent revolution, the end goal of which was to spread communism worldwide through perpetual warfare.
clarity
0.99684757
964610
1
At the time, the Soviet Union's foreign policy was driven by the trotskyist idea of permanent revolution, the end goal of which was to spread communism worldwide through perpetual warfare.
<fluency> At the time, the Soviet Union's foreign policy was driven by the trotskyist idea of permanent revolution, the end goal of which was to spread communism worldwide through perpetual warfare.
At the time, the Soviet Union's foreign policy was driven by the Trotskyist idea of permanent revolution, the end goal of which was to spread communism worldwide through perpetual warfare.
fluency
0.99936813
964610
1
However, the Soviet advance to the west was halted by Poland, who managed to defeat the Red Army during the Polish–Soviet War.
<fluency> However, the Soviet advance to the west was halted by Poland, who managed to defeat the Red Army during the Polish–Soviet War.
However, the Soviet advance to the west was halted by Poland, whicglh managed to defeat the Red Army during the Polish–Soviet War.
fluency
0.9987852
964610
1
Following the war, Polish leader Józef Piłsudski made attempts to unify the border states under a federation called Intermarium, but disputes and different allegiances between and within the group of states prevented such a thing from happening, leaving them more susceptible to possible incursions by their more powerful neighbors.
<fluency> Following the war, Polish leader Józef Piłsudski made attempts to unify the border states under a federation called Intermarium, but disputes and different allegiances between and within the group of states prevented such a thing from happening, leaving them more susceptible to possible incursions by their more powerful neighbors.
After the war, Polish leader Józef Piłsudski made attempts to unify the border states under a federation called Intermarium, but disputes and different allegiances between and within the group of states prevented such a thing from happening, leaving them more susceptible to possible incursions by their more powerful neighbors.
fluency
0.9992549
964610
1
Only nine days after this treaty was signed, Nazi Germany invaded Poland, and the Soviets followed suit shortly after, beginning World War II in Europe.
<clarity> Only nine days after this treaty was signed, Nazi Germany invaded Poland, and the Soviets followed suit shortly after, beginning World War II in Europe.
Only nine days after the pact was signed, Nazi Germany invaded Poland, and the Soviets followed suit shortly after, beginning World War II in Europe.
clarity
0.98582095
964610
1
After the end of the war, all border states except for Finland were transferred to Soviet occupation as a result of the Western betrayal , although Finland had already ceded some of its territory to the Soviet Union following the Winter War.
<fluency> After the end of the war, all border states except for Finland were transferred to Soviet occupation as a result of the Western betrayal , although Finland had already ceded some of its territory to the Soviet Union following the Winter War.
After the end of the war, all border states except for Finland were transferred to Soviet occupation as a result of the Western betrayal although Finland had already ceded some of its territory to the Soviet Union following the Winter War.
fluency
0.9992926
964610
1
A second plaque in the Bemba language ends with the words Twapela umuchinshi kuli bonse abashipa abalwile mu nkondo iyi which means we honour all brave soldiers in this war. (More Africans than Europeans fought and died on both sides in the East African campaign, thousands more Africans who served as porters (sometimes under force) also died, and the civilian population suffered tremendously).
<coherence> A second plaque in the Bemba language ends with the words Twapela umuchinshi kuli bonse abashipa abalwile mu nkondo iyi which means we honour all brave soldiers in this war. (More Africans than Europeans fought and died on both sides in the East African campaign, thousands more Africans who served as porters (sometimes under force) also died, and the civilian population suffered tremendously).
A second plaque in the Bemba language ends with the words Twapela umuchinshi kuli bonse abashipa abalwile mu nkondo iyi which means we honour all brave soldiers in this war.
coherence
0.9914846
9647304
1
Most accounts of the war say that Lettow-Vorbeck surrendered at Abercorn (now Mbala), 250 km to the north, giving the impression that he penetrated just the few kilometres to Abercorn from German East Africa, but that is only because he was instructed by the British imperial commanders in Northern Rhodesia to march his undefeated troops there for the official surrender on 23 November 1918.
<clarity> Most accounts of the war say that Lettow-Vorbeck surrendered at Abercorn (now Mbala), 250 km to the north, giving the impression that he penetrated just the few kilometres to Abercorn from German East Africa, but that is only because he was instructed by the British imperial commanders in Northern Rhodesia to march his undefeated troops there for the official surrender on 23 November 1918.
Most accounts of the war say that Lettow-Vorbeck surrendered at Abercorn (now Mbala), 250 km to the north, giving the impression that he penetrated just the few kilometres to Abercorn from German East Africa, but that is only because he was instructed by the British military commanders in Northern Rhodesia to march his undefeated troops there for the official surrender on 23 November 1918.
clarity
0.99717927
9647304
1
Most accounts of the war say that Lettow-Vorbeck surrendered at Abercorn (now Mbala), 250 km to the north, giving the impression that he penetrated just the few kilometres to Abercorn from German East Africa, but that is only because he was instructed by the British imperial commanders in Northern Rhodesia to march his undefeated troops there for the official surrender on 23 November 1918.
<meaning-changed> Most accounts of the war say that Lettow-Vorbeck surrendered at Abercorn (now Mbala), 250 km to the north, giving the impression that he penetrated just the few kilometres to Abercorn from German East Africa, but that is only because he was instructed by the British imperial commanders in Northern Rhodesia to march his undefeated troops there for the official surrender on 23 November 1918.
Most accounts of the war say that Lettow-Vorbeck surrendered at Abercorn (now Mbala), 250 km to the north, giving the impression that he penetrated just the few kilometres to Abercorn from German East Africa, but that is only because he was instructed by the British imperial commanders in Northern Rhodesia to march his undefeated troops there for the official surrender on 23 November 1918. Fred Reid: In Search of Willie Patterson: A Scottish Soldier in the Age of Imperialism Cualann Press, Dunfermaline (2002). p.121.
meaning-changed
0.99840516
9647304
1
However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
<meaning-changed> However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
According to Wisden India: the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
meaning-changed
0.99943334
965359
1
However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
<meaning-changed> However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
However, Greig fielded "Julien fended towards Greig’s right, and thought he’d seen off the day as he turned around and began walking back. Alan Knott, the England wicketkeeper, seemed to think the same as he dislodged the stumps, but even as he did so, Greig, who had collected the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
meaning-changed
0.9993618
965359
1
However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
<clarity> However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
However, Greig fielded the ball, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran.
clarity
0.99760854
965359
1
However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran. Umpire Douglas Sang Hue gave the batsman out, and a near-riot broke outin the crowd.
<meaning-changed> However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps , and appealed for a run out decision against Kallicharran. Umpire Douglas Sang Hue gave the batsman out, and a near-riot broke outin the crowd.
However, Greig fielded the ball, whirled around, threw down the stumps at the non-striker’s end, with Kallicharan already out of the crease, on the way to the dressing room. Greig appealed, and the umpire gave it out. There was confusion as everyone in the venue came to terms with what had happened. Some only realised when the wickets column on the scoreboard ticked over to seven, and according to an ESPNcricinfo piece looking back at the incident, the crowd.
meaning-changed
0.9991683
965359
1
Umpire Douglas Sang Hue gave the batsman out, and a near-riot broke outin the crowd. The spectators stormed the ground and laid siege to the pavilion, calling for the decision to be revoked.
<meaning-changed> Umpire Douglas Sang Hue gave the batsman out, and a near-riot broke outin the crowd. The spectators stormed the ground and laid siege to the pavilion, calling for the decision to be revoked.
Umpire Douglas Sang Hue gave the batsman out, and a near-riot broke outin the crowd began to boo. The commentators on radio speculated that, given Knott had dislodged the stumps before Greig broke the stumps, the ball was dead, and on the basis of that, the pavilion, calling for the decision to be revoked.
meaning-changed
0.99949
965359
1
The spectators stormed the ground and laid siege to the pavilion, calling for the decision to be revoked. Technically, the decision was correct as Sang Hue had not called time on the day's play, but Greig 's actions were considered unsporting, and that, together with the crowd's reaction, persuaded the England captain to revoke the appeal. Kallicharran was reinstated the following day, when he took his score to 158. The incident was controversial – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.
<meaning-changed> The spectators stormed the ground and laid siege to the pavilion, calling for the decision to be revoked. Technically, the decision was correct as Sang Hue had not called time on the day's play, but Greig 's actions were considered unsporting, and that, together with the crowd's reaction, persuaded the England captain to revoke the appeal. Kallicharran was reinstated the following day, when he took his score to 158. The incident was controversial – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.
The spectators stormed the ground and laid siege to the scoreboard reverted to 274-6. – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.
meaning-changed
0.99935657
965359
1
The incident was controversial – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.
<meaning-changed> The incident was controversial – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.
The incident was controversial However, there was a lot more to it than that. In a meeting involving the two captains, the West Indies board representatives and England’s tour manager Donald Carr, it was decided – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.
meaning-changed
0.9992367
965359
1
The incident was controversial – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt. For his part, Greig claimed that his actions were not premeditated, that his back was to the play and he was unaware thatproceedings were over. If his actions had been premeditated, they would have been rather reckless given the risk of stirring up the notoriously volatile Trinidadian crowd. England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
<meaning-changed> The incident was controversial – some believing it a black stain on his character, others prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt. For his part, Greig claimed that his actions were not premeditated, that his back was to the play and he was unaware thatproceedings were over. If his actions had been premeditated, they would have been rather reckless given the risk of stirring up the notoriously volatile Trinidadian crowd. England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
The incident was controversial – after two and a half hours – that Kallicharan would be reinstated, despite the umpire standing by his call. In a press conference the next day – a rest day – the captains announced that, in the “interest of cricket as a whole” the appeal against Kallicharan had been withdrawn. The statement also contained an apology from Greig, with the Englishman and Kallicharan publicly shaking hands when play resumed." . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
meaning-changed
0.99824595
965359
1
England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
<meaning-changed> England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball West Indies secured a seven-wicket victory in the test, Greig making only a modest contribution with the bat. This was not the last time Greig courted controversy both on and off the field . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
meaning-changed
0.99929225
965359
1
England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
<clarity> England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite the initial setback in this test match, Greig dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
clarity
0.9894454
965359
1
England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
<fluency> England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 and seven catches.
England convincingly lost the Test and Greig failed with bat and ball . Despite this initial setback , he dominated the remainder of the series, scoring 430 runs at 47.7, taking 24 wickets (most of them with spin) at 22.6 , and seven catches.
fluency
0.99898237
965359
1
The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
<meaning-changed> The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) argues that people are more likely to form and succeed in a committed relationship with someone who is equally socially desirable, typically in the form of physical attraction. The hypothesis is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
meaning-changed
0.9992126
965390
1
The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
<meaning-changed> The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by American social psychologist Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
meaning-changed
0.999551
965390
1
The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
<fluency> The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966, Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
The matching hypothesis (also known as the matching phenomenon) is derived from the discipline of social psychology and was first proposed by Elaine Hatfield and her colleagues in 1966. Walster, E., Aronson, V., Abrahams, D., & Rottman, L. (1966).
fluency
0.9983828
965390
1
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 4(5), 508-516 . which suggests why people become attracted to their partner. It claims that people are more likely to form and succeed in a committed relationship with someone who is equally socially desirable. This is often researched in the form of physical attraction .
<coherence> Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 4(5), 508-516 . which suggests why people become attracted to their partner. It claims that people are more likely to form and succeed in a committed relationship with someone who is equally socially desirable. This is often researched in the form of physical attraction .
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 4(5), 508-516 .
coherence
0.9983639
965390
1
He is the wealthiest man in Russia and the 44th richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of $31.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. His long-term business partner was Mikhail Prokhorov until they decided to split in 2007. Subsequently, they put their mutual assets in a holding company, Folletina Trading, until their asset division was agreed upon. In January 2018, Potanin appeared on the US Treasury's "Putin list" of 210 individuals closely associated with Russian president Vladimir Putin. The FBI announced in July 2018 that ByteGrid, a data solutions provider contracted to store Maryland State Board of Elections data, was owned by a private equity firm in which Potanin is an investor. A retroactive investigative report issued by the US Department of Homeland Security's National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center found no indication that the MDSBE corporate network had been compromised. The contract has since been transferred to Intelishift as a precaution. Early life and education Potanin was born in Moscow, in the former USSR, into a high-ranking communist family. In 1978, he attended the faculty of the International economic relations at Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), which groomed students for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Upon graduating MGIMO in 1983, he followed in his father's footsteps and went to work for the FTO "Soyuzpromexport" with the Ministry of Foreign trade of the Soviet Union. Career Beginnings (1991–1998) During perestroika, Potanin quit the State's structures of Foreign trade and in 1991 created the private association Interros using his knowledge gathered at Ministry of Foreign trade and his previous professional network. In 1993, Potanin became President of the newly formed United Export Import Bank (ONEKSIMbank) () (akas: Uneximbank; Onexim Bank; Oneksimbank).Объединенный экспортно-импортный банк "ОНЭКСИМ-банк": аналитический обзор 1997 год Oneksimbank is the financial twin of MFK and was also known as the ONEKSIMbank-MFK banking group which was also close to Andrey Vavilov."Справка Сорокина" о залоговых аукционах 1995 года и их последствиях: Методы и последствия приватизации "Норильского никеля""Умный, хваткий, с авантюрной жилкой" Potanin is a close supporter of Anatoly Chubais who introduced Potanin to Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin.Объединенный экспортно-импортный банк "ОНЭКСИМ-банк": аналитический обзор 1997 год Potanin is very hostile to the "Jewish banking lobby" (): Gusinsky, Khodorkovsky, Smolensky, etc.Жизнь и бизнес олигарха: Потанин Владимир Олегович (9) During the Iraq oil for food program, his bank ONEKSIMbank facilitated the illegal sale and illegal shipments of Russian weapons in 1994 with some of the funds exported using Hansabank to Estonia. According to his ONEKSIMBANK security service which was headed by former senior KGB officer V.P. Buchumov () and works closely with the "Fort" private security firm () which is headed by his wife N. A. Kaya (), Potanin received support from Oleg Boyko through both the Konvent Association () and Olby-Diplomat JSC () and also from Zelenin through Microdin (). This led to Potanin linked to the Russian mafia through both the Solntsevskaya bratva and Dolgoprudnenskaya bratva. In 1995, Potanin was instrumental in the creation of the "loans for shares" auctions that became a fundamental pillar of Russia's post-Soviet economic reform. The auctions allowed the selling-off of Russian firms' assets at below market prices and are regarded as the founding moment of Russia's oligarchy. According to the New York Times, the auctions plan is "Regarded today almost universally as an act of colossal criminality." From 14 August 1996 until 17 March 1997, he worked as First Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation. In 1997, Boris Jordan introduced George Soros to Potanin which led to the Soros Group supported by Potanin, Anatoly Chubais, and Alfred Koch to have the controlling stake in the Russian communications monopoly over the Berezovsky-Gusinsky group. One year later Soros admitted that his large investment in Svyazinvest was mistake.Тихий американец или 5 российских скандалов из жизни Бориса Йордана Since August 1998, Potanin has held the positions of both President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Interros Company. On November 25, 1998, Potanin recommended Boris Jordan to be Chairman of Sidanko which Jordan held until February 1999 when he stepped down.Йордан Борис Алексеевич ("Панорама") Norilsk Nickel Potanin and his long-term business partner Mikhail Prokhorov acquired Norilsk Nickel in the early 1990s under the "loans for shares" scheme, owning between them 54\% of the firm. Potanin owns a 34\% stake. They streamlined operations and turned Norilsk Nickel into a modern corporation. Dispute with Mikhail Prokhorov In 2007, Potanin split with Prokhorov, citing Prokhorov's brief detention by French police over soliciting prostitution as the reason and announced the intent to acquire Prokhorov's Norilsk Nickel assets for a reported $ 1 billion.
<fluency> He is the wealthiest man in Russia and the 44th richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of $31.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. His long-term business partner was Mikhail Prokhorov until they decided to split in 2007. Subsequently, they put their mutual assets in a holding company, Folletina Trading, until their asset division was agreed upon. In January 2018, Potanin appeared on the US Treasury's "Putin list" of 210 individuals closely associated with Russian president Vladimir Putin. The FBI announced in July 2018 that ByteGrid, a data solutions provider contracted to store Maryland State Board of Elections data, was owned by a private equity firm in which Potanin is an investor. A retroactive investigative report issued by the US Department of Homeland Security's National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center found no indication that the MDSBE corporate network had been compromised. The contract has since been transferred to Intelishift as a precaution. Early life and education Potanin was born in Moscow, in the former USSR, into a high-ranking communist family. In 1978, he attended the faculty of the International economic relations at Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), which groomed students for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Upon graduating MGIMO in 1983, he followed in his father's footsteps and went to work for the FTO "Soyuzpromexport" with the Ministry of Foreign trade of the Soviet Union. Career Beginnings (1991–1998) During perestroika, Potanin quit the State's structures of Foreign trade and in 1991 created the private association Interros using his knowledge gathered at Ministry of Foreign trade and his previous professional network. In 1993, Potanin became President of the newly formed United Export Import Bank (ONEKSIMbank) () (akas: Uneximbank; Onexim Bank; Oneksimbank).Объединенный экспортно-импортный банк "ОНЭКСИМ-банк": аналитический обзор 1997 год Oneksimbank is the financial twin of MFK and was also known as the ONEKSIMbank-MFK banking group which was also close to Andrey Vavilov."Справка Сорокина" о залоговых аукционах 1995 года и их последствиях: Методы и последствия приватизации "Норильского никеля""Умный, хваткий, с авантюрной жилкой" Potanin is a close supporter of Anatoly Chubais who introduced Potanin to Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin.Объединенный экспортно-импортный банк "ОНЭКСИМ-банк": аналитический обзор 1997 год Potanin is very hostile to the "Jewish banking lobby" (): Gusinsky, Khodorkovsky, Smolensky, etc.Жизнь и бизнес олигарха: Потанин Владимир Олегович (9) During the Iraq oil for food program, his bank ONEKSIMbank facilitated the illegal sale and illegal shipments of Russian weapons in 1994 with some of the funds exported using Hansabank to Estonia. According to his ONEKSIMBANK security service which was headed by former senior KGB officer V.P. Buchumov () and works closely with the "Fort" private security firm () which is headed by his wife N. A. Kaya (), Potanin received support from Oleg Boyko through both the Konvent Association () and Olby-Diplomat JSC () and also from Zelenin through Microdin (). This led to Potanin linked to the Russian mafia through both the Solntsevskaya bratva and Dolgoprudnenskaya bratva. In 1995, Potanin was instrumental in the creation of the "loans for shares" auctions that became a fundamental pillar of Russia's post-Soviet economic reform. The auctions allowed the selling-off of Russian firms' assets at below market prices and are regarded as the founding moment of Russia's oligarchy. According to the New York Times, the auctions plan is "Regarded today almost universally as an act of colossal criminality." From 14 August 1996 until 17 March 1997, he worked as First Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation. In 1997, Boris Jordan introduced George Soros to Potanin which led to the Soros Group supported by Potanin, Anatoly Chubais, and Alfred Koch to have the controlling stake in the Russian communications monopoly over the Berezovsky-Gusinsky group. One year later Soros admitted that his large investment in Svyazinvest was mistake.Тихий американец или 5 российских скандалов из жизни Бориса Йордана Since August 1998, Potanin has held the positions of both President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Interros Company. On November 25, 1998, Potanin recommended Boris Jordan to be Chairman of Sidanko which Jordan held until February 1999 when he stepped down.Йордан Борис Алексеевич ("Панорама") Norilsk Nickel Potanin and his long-term business partner Mikhail Prokhorov acquired Norilsk Nickel in the early 1990s under the "loans for shares" scheme, owning between them 54\% of the firm. Potanin owns a 34\% stake. They streamlined operations and turned Norilsk Nickel into a modern corporation. Dispute with Mikhail Prokhorov In 2007, Potanin split with Prokhorov, citing Prokhorov's brief detention by French police over soliciting prostitution as the reason and announced the intent to acquire Prokhorov's Norilsk Nickel assets for a reported $ 1 billion.
He is the wealthiest man in Russia and the 44th richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of $31.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. His long-term business partner was Mikhail Prokhorov until they decided to split in 2007. Subsequently, they put their mutual assets in a holding company, Folletina Trading, until their asset division was agreed upon. In January 2018, Potanin appeared on the US Treasury's "Putin list" of 210 individuals closely associated with Russian president Vladimir Putin. The FBI announced in July 2018 that ByteGrid, a data solutions provider contracted to store Maryland State Board of Elections data, was owned by a private equity firm in which Potanin is an investor. A retroactive investigative report issued by the US Department of Homeland Security's National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center found no indication that the MDSBE corporate network had been compromised. The contract has since been transferred to Intelishift as a precaution. Early life and education Potanin was born in Moscow, in the former USSR, into a high-ranking communist family. In 1978, he attended the faculty of the International economic relations at Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), which groomed students for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Upon graduating MGIMO in 1983, he followed in his father's footsteps and went to work for the FTO "Soyuzpromexport" with the Ministry of Foreign trade of the Soviet Union. Career Beginnings (1991–1998) During perestroika, Potanin quit the State's structures of Foreign trade and in 1991 created the private association Interros using his knowledge gathered at Ministry of Foreign trade and his previous professional network. In 1993, Potanin became President of the newly formed United Export Import Bank (ONEKSIMbank) () (akas: Uneximbank; Onexim Bank; Oneksimbank).Объединенный экспортно-импортный банк "ОНЭКСИМ-банк": аналитический обзор 1997 год Oneksimbank is the financial twin of MFK and was also known as the ONEKSIMbank-MFK banking group which was also close to Andrey Vavilov."Справка Сорокина" о залоговых аукционах 1995 года и их последствиях: Методы и последствия приватизации "Норильского никеля""Умный, хваткий, с авантюрной жилкой" Potanin is a close supporter of Anatoly Chubais who introduced Potanin to Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin.Объединенный экспортно-импортный банк "ОНЭКСИМ-банк": аналитический обзор 1997 год During the Iraq oil for food program, his bank ONEKSIMbank facilitated the illegal sale and illegal shipments of Russian weapons in 1994 with some of the funds exported using Hansabank to Estonia.Жизнь и бизнес олигарха: Потанин Владимир Олегович (9) In 1995, Potanin was instrumental in the creation of the "loans for shares" auctions that became a fundamental pillar of Russia's post-Soviet economic reform. The auctions allowed the selling-off of Russian firms' assets at below market prices and are regarded as the founding moment of Russia's oligarchy. According to the New York Times, the auctions plan is "Regarded today almost universally as an act of colossal criminality." From 14 August 1996 until 17 March 1997, he worked as First Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation. In 1997, Boris Jordan introduced George Soros to Potanin which led to the Soros Group supported by Potanin, Anatoly Chubais, and Alfred Koch to have the controlling stake in the Russian communications monopoly over the Berezovsky-Gusinsky group. One year later Soros admitted that his large investment in Svyazinvest was mistake.Тихий американец или 5 российских скандалов из жизни Бориса Йордана Since August 1998, Potanin has held the positions of both President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Interros Company. On November 25, 1998, Potanin recommended Boris Jordan to be Chairman of Sidanko which Jordan held until February 1999 when he stepped down.Йордан Борис Алексеевич ("Панорама") Norilsk Nickel Potanin and his long-term business partner Mikhail Prokhorov acquired Norilsk Nickel in the early 1990s under the "loans for shares" scheme, owning between them 54\% of the firm. Potanin owns a 34\% stake. They streamlined operations and turned Norilsk Nickel into a modern corporation. Dispute with Mikhail Prokhorov In 2007, Potanin split with Prokhorov, citing Prokhorov's brief detention by French police over soliciting prostitution as the reason and announced the intent to acquire Prokhorov's Norilsk Nickel assets for a reported $ 1 billion.
fluency
0.98560053
966006
1
Although a leaky diode, i.e. the reverse flow is non-zero for any applied pressure difference , it could be used in fluid circuits to convert AC to DC.
<fluency> Although a leaky diode, i.e. the reverse flow is non-zero for any applied pressure difference , it could be used in fluid circuits to convert AC to DC.
It's a leaky diode, i.e. the reverse flow is non-zero for any applied pressure difference , it could be used in fluid circuits to convert AC to DC.
fluency
0.99073046
966106
1
Although a leaky diode, i.e. the reverse flow is non-zero for any applied pressure difference , it could be used in fluid circuits to convert AC to DC.
<meaning-changed> Although a leaky diode, i.e. the reverse flow is non-zero for any applied pressure difference , it could be used in fluid circuits to convert AC to DC.
Although a leaky diode, i.e. the reverse flow is non-zero for any applied pressure difference . Tesla valve also has non-linear response, as it effectiveness has frequency dependence. It could be used in fluid circuits to convert AC to DC.
meaning-changed
0.99938
966106
1
Political cartoon by JM Staniforth : Herbert Kitchener attempts to raise £100,000 for a college in Sudan by calling on the name of Charles George Gordon A confidence trick is an attempt to defraud a person or group after first gaining their trust.
<fluency> Political cartoon by JM Staniforth : Herbert Kitchener attempts to raise £100,000 for a college in Sudan by calling on the name of Charles George Gordon A confidence trick is an attempt to defraud a person or group after first gaining their trust.
Political cartoon by JM : Herbert Kitchener attempts to raise £100,000 for a college in Sudan by calling on the name of Charles George Gordon A confidence trick is an attempt to defraud a person or group after first gaining their trust.
fluency
0.5002401
96637
1
Confidence tricks exploit victims using their credulity, naïveté , compassion, vanity, irresponsibility, and greed.
<meaning-changed> Confidence tricks exploit victims using their credulity, naïveté , compassion, vanity, irresponsibility, and greed.
Confidence tricks exploit victims using their accounts.google.com, , compassion, vanity, irresponsibility, and greed.
meaning-changed
0.99675614
96637
1
Category:Deception Category:Fraud Category:Crime Category:Organized crime activit
<fluency> Category:Deception Category:Fraud Category:Crime Category:Organized crime activit
Category:Deception Category:Fraud Category:Crime Category:Organized crime activity opt o
fluency
0.9987771
96637
1
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
<clarity> Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equine magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
clarity
0.8190755
967402
1
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
<fluency> Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
fluency
0.99933714
967402
1
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
<coherence> Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
coherence
0.8650783
967402
1
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
<fluency> Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Weekly magazines published in Kentuck
fluency
0.9993179
967402
1
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
<fluency> Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in Kentuck
Category: Equine magazines Category:Weekly magazines published in the United States Category:Horse racing Category:Magazines established in 1916 Category: 1916 establishments in Kentucky Category:Equestrian sports in the United States Category: Magazines published in Kentucky Category: Equine magazines published in the United Sta
fluency
0.9992317
967402
1
Limiting factors The factors affecting V̇O2 are often divided into supply and demand.
<clarity> Limiting factors The factors affecting V̇O2 are often divided into supply and demand.
Limiting factors The factors affecting V̇O2 may be separated into supply and demand.
clarity
0.9978727
968834
1
Supply is the transport of oxygen from the lungs to the mitochondria ( including lung diffusion, stroke volume , blood volume, and capillary density of the skeletal muscle) while demand is the rate at which the mitochondria can reduce oxygen in the process of oxidative phosphorylation.
<meaning-changed> Supply is the transport of oxygen from the lungs to the mitochondria ( including lung diffusion, stroke volume , blood volume, and capillary density of the skeletal muscle) while demand is the rate at which the mitochondria can reduce oxygen in the process of oxidative phosphorylation.
Supply is the transport of oxygen from the lungs to the mitochondria ( combining pulmonary function, cardiac output , blood volume, and capillary density of the skeletal muscle) while demand is the rate at which the mitochondria can reduce oxygen in the process of oxidative phosphorylation.
meaning-changed
0.99431676
968834
1
Of these, the supply factor is often considered to be the limitingone .
<clarity> Of these, the supply factor is often considered to be the limitingone .
Of these, the supply factors may be more limiting .
clarity
0.99796164
968834
1
Factors that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
<clarity> Factors that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
General characteristics that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
clarity
0.9968436
968834
1
Factors that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
<fluency> Factors that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
Factors that affect V̇O2 max include age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
fluency
0.9988182
968834
1
Factors that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
<coherence> Factors that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, altitude, among others . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
Factors that affect V̇O2 max are age, sex, fitness and training, and altitude . V̇O2 max can be a poor predictor of performance in runners due to variations in running economy and fatigue resistance during prolonged exercise.
coherence
0.98135847
968834
1
Cardiac output, pulmonary diffusion capacity, oxygen carrying capacity, and the peripheral limitations of muscle diffusion capacity, mitochondrial enzymes, and capillary density are all examples of V̇O2 max determinants.
<coherence> Cardiac output, pulmonary diffusion capacity, oxygen carrying capacity, and the peripheral limitations of muscle diffusion capacity, mitochondrial enzymes, and capillary density are all examples of V̇O2 max determinants.
coherence
0.99299943
968834
1
If one of these factors is sub-par, then the whole system loses its normal capacity to function properly .
<clarity> If one of these factors is sub-par, then the whole system loses its normal capacity to function properly .
If one of these factors is sub-par, then the whole system 's normal capacity is reduced .
clarity
0.9987941
968834
1
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
<meaning-changed> For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
Hermann von Helmholtz: Handbuch der physiologischen Optik section II § 24: ‘Genauer unterscheidet Chevreul die hierher gehörigen Erscheinungen unter dem Namen des simultanen Contrastes von denjenigen, wo zwei Farben nach einander auf derselben Netzhautstelle erscheinen, welche er mit dem Namen des successiven Contrastes belegt.’ In the example below you can use the scrollbar to quickly swap the red and green disks for two orange disks. Staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
meaning-changed
0.999343
971922
1
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
<fluency> For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
For example, staring at the dot in the centre of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
fluency
0.99814
971922
1
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
<clarity> For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the top two coloured disks and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
clarity
0.99875236
971922
1
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
<clarity> For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the centre of the corresponding lower disk makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
clarity
0.99849224
971922
1
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
<meaning-changed> For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks briefly appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.
meaning-changed
0.8404457
971922
1
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.296x296px|Metacontrast and paracontrast|alt=
<clarity> For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colors for a few moments, though they have the same color.296x296px|Metacontrast and paracontrast|alt=
For example, staring at the dot in the center of one of the two colored disks on the top row for a few seconds and then looking at the dot in the center of the disk on the same side in the bottom row makes the two lower disks appear to have different colours, though in reality their colour is identical.
clarity
0.99882346
971922
1
296x296px|Metacontrast and paracontrast|alt=
<meaning-changed> 296x296px|Metacontrast and paracontrast|alt=
296x296px|Metacontrast and paracontrast|alt= • •• •
meaning-changed
0.939111
971922
1
Successive contrast |alt=|192x192pxThis is a different concept from contrast, which by itself refers to one object's difference in color and luminance compared to its surroundings or background.
<coherence> Successive contrast |alt=|192x192pxThis is a different concept from contrast, which by itself refers to one object's difference in color and luminance compared to its surroundings or background.
coherence
0.9978073
971922
2
Successive contrast Successive contrast occurs when the perception of currently viewed stimuli is modulated by previously viewed stimuli.
<fluency> Successive contrast Successive contrast occurs when the perception of currently viewed stimuli is modulated by previously viewed stimuli.
Successive contrast Successive contrast occurs when the perception of currently viewed stimuli is modulated by previously viewed stimuli.
fluency
0.99614257
971922
2
Hermann von Helmholtz: Handbuch der physiologischen Optik section II § 24: ‘Genauer unterscheidet Chevreul die hierher gehörigen Erscheinungen unter dem Namen des simultanen Contrastes von denjenigen, wo zwei Farben nach einander auf derselben Netzhautstelle erscheinen, welche er mit dem Namen des successiven Contrastes belegt.’
<meaning-changed> Hermann von Helmholtz: Handbuch der physiologischen Optik section II § 24: ‘Genauer unterscheidet Chevreul die hierher gehörigen Erscheinungen unter dem Namen des simultanen Contrastes von denjenigen, wo zwei Farben nach einander auf derselben Netzhautstelle erscheinen, welche er mit dem Namen des successiven Contrastes belegt.’
Chevreul, Michel Eugène (1839). De la loi du contraste simultané des couleurs et de l'assortiment des objets colorés – traduit en anglais par Charles Martel comme Les principes d’harmonie et de contraste des couleurs (1854) Hermann von Helmholtz: Handbuch der physiologischen Optik section II § 24: ‘Genauer unterscheidet Chevreul die hierher gehörigen Erscheinungen unter dem Namen des simultanen Contrastes von denjenigen, wo zwei Farben nach einander auf derselben Netzhautstelle erscheinen, welche er mit dem Namen des successiven Contrastes belegt.’
meaning-changed
0.99784636
971922
2
Metacontrast and paracontrast Metacontrast and paracontrast involve both time and space.
<meaning-changed> Metacontrast and paracontrast Metacontrast and paracontrast involve both time and space.
Metacontrast and paracontrast 296x296px| Metacontrast and paracontrast involve both time and space.
meaning-changed
0.9994216
971922
2
Metacontrast and paracontrast Metacontrast and paracontrast involve both time and space.
<meaning-changed> Metacontrast and paracontrast Metacontrast and paracontrast involve both time and space.
Metacontrast and paracontrast Metacontrast and paracontrast |alt=Metacontrast and paracontrast involve both time and space.
meaning-changed
0.9992582
971922
2
References Chevreul, Michel Eugène (1839). De la loi du contraste simultané des couleurs et de l'assortiment des objets colorés .- traduit en anglais par Charles Martel comme Les principes d’harmonie et de contraste des couleurs (1854)
<coherence> References Chevreul, Michel Eugène (1839). De la loi du contraste simultané des couleurs et de l'assortiment des objets colorés .- traduit en anglais par Charles Martel comme Les principes d’harmonie et de contraste des couleurs (1854)
References
coherence
0.45376253
971922
2
See also Assimilation and contrast effects Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
<meaning-changed> See also Assimilation and contrast effects Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
See also The checker shadow illusion Assimilation and contrast effects Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
meaning-changed
0.99938476
971922
3
See also Assimilation and contrast effects Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
<meaning-changed> See also Assimilation and contrast effects Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
See also Assimilation and contrast effects Checker shadow illusion Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
meaning-changed
0.9994654
971922
3
See also The checker shadow illusion Assimilation and contrast effects Checker shadow illusion Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
<coherence> See also The checker shadow illusion Assimilation and contrast effects Checker shadow illusion Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
The checker shadow illusion Assimilation and contrast effects Checker shadow illusion Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
coherence
0.99825937
971922
4
See also The checker shadow illusion Assimilation and contrast effects Checker shadow illusion Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
<fluency> See also The checker shadow illusion Assimilation and contrast effects Checker shadow illusion Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
See also The checker shadow illusion See also Assimilation and contrast effects Checker shadow illusion Chubb illusion Less-is-better effect and distinction bias Negative (Positive) contrast effect List of cognitive biases
fluency
0.9993975
971922
4
On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Reception ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
<coherence> On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Reception ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." Reception ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
coherence
0.9941789
972252
1
On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Reception ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
<meaning-changed> On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Reception ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Anti-colonial campaigner commemorated with plaque ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
meaning-changed
0.9993818
972252
1
On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Reception ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
<meaning-changed> On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Reception ", George Padmore Institute, 7 November 2011.
On 28 June 2011 – 98 years to the day since Padmore was born – the Nubian Jak Community Trust unveiled a blue plaque at Padmore's former address, 22 Cranleigh Street in the London Borough of Camden, in a ceremony addressed by the High Commissioner of Trinidad & Tobago, the High Commissioner of Ghana, the Mayor of Camden, Selma James, Nina Baden-Semper (related to Padmore's in-laws), and others." George Padmore blue Plaque Unveiling Reception ", BBC News London, 28 June 2011.
meaning-changed
0.99919206
972252
1
John Gulliver, "Toast to slayer of empires", Camden New Journal, 30 June 2011."Anti-colonial campaigner commemorated with plaque", BBC News London, 28 June 2011.
<clarity> John Gulliver, "Toast to slayer of empires", Camden New Journal, 30 June 2011."Anti-colonial campaigner commemorated with plaque", BBC News London, 28 June 2011.
John Gulliver, "Toast to slayer of empires", Camden New Journal, 30 June 2011.
clarity
0.5691149
972252
1
It can also cause psychotic as well as other mental symptoms and relatedly occurs in people with psychiatric conditions .
<coherence> It can also cause psychotic as well as other mental symptoms and relatedly occurs in people with psychiatric conditions .
It can also cause psychotic as well as other mental symptoms .
coherence
0.9943182
972656
1
A more common cause is excessive loss of potassium, often associated with heavy fluid losses that "flush" potassium out of the body.
<clarity> A more common cause is excessive loss of potassium, often associated with heavy fluid losses that "flush" potassium out of the body.
A more common cause is excessive loss of potassium, often associated with heavy fluid losses that flushpotassium out of the body.
clarity
0.9591783
972656
1
Treatment Treatment including addressing the cause, such as improving the diet, treating diarrhea, or stopping an offending medication.
<fluency> Treatment Treatment including addressing the cause, such as improving the diet, treating diarrhea, or stopping an offending medication.
Treatment Treatment includes addressing the cause, such as improving the diet, treating diarrhea, or stopping an offending medication.
fluency
0.99915326
972656
1
Eating potassium-rich foods may not be the optimal method for correcting low potassium and potassium supplements may be recommended.
<clarity> Eating potassium-rich foods may not be the optimal method for correcting low potassium and potassium supplements may be recommended.
Eating potassium-rich foods may not be sufficient for correcting low potassium and potassium supplements may be recommended.
clarity
0.9986339
972656
1
Eating potassium-rich foods may not be the optimal method for correcting low potassium and potassium supplements may be recommended.
<coherence> Eating potassium-rich foods may not be the optimal method for correcting low potassium and potassium supplements may be recommended.
Eating potassium-rich foods may not be the optimal method for correcting low potassium ; potassium supplements may be recommended.
coherence
0.99214375
972656
1
Steatopygia is the state of having substantial levels of tissue on the buttocks and thighs. This build is not confined to the gluteal regions, but extends to the outside and front of the thighs, and tapers to the knee producing a curvaceous figure. The term is from the Greek (), meaning "tallow", and (), meaning "rump". The Neolithic "Steatopygous Goddess from Pano Chorio", c. 5800–4800 BC, terracotta, Crete; whether she is really a goddess is uncertain. Steatopygia, a genetic characteristic leading to increased accumulation of adipose tissue in the buttock region, is found in some women of Sub-Saharan African origin, most notably (but not solely) among the Khoisan of Southern Africa and Pygmies of Central Africa. It has also been observed among the Andamanese people, such as the Onge tribe, in the Andaman Islands. This genetic characteristic is prevalent among women but also occurs to a lesser degree in men.
<coherence> Steatopygia is the state of having substantial levels of tissue on the buttocks and thighs. This build is not confined to the gluteal regions, but extends to the outside and front of the thighs, and tapers to the knee producing a curvaceous figure. The term is from the Greek (), meaning "tallow", and (), meaning "rump". The Neolithic "Steatopygous Goddess from Pano Chorio", c. 5800–4800 BC, terracotta, Crete; whether she is really a goddess is uncertain. Steatopygia, a genetic characteristic leading to increased accumulation of adipose tissue in the buttock region, is found in some women of Sub-Saharan African origin, most notably (but not solely) among the Khoisan of Southern Africa and Pygmies of Central Africa. It has also been observed among the Andamanese people, such as the Onge tribe, in the Andaman Islands. This genetic characteristic is prevalent among women but also occurs to a lesser degree in men.
coherence
0.9874506
973312
1
Steatopygia would seem to have been a characteristic of a population which once extended from the Gulf of Aden to the Cape of Good Hope, from which peoples the Khoisan and Pygmies may be remnants. Among the Khoisan, it begins in infancy and is fully developed by the time of the firstpregnancy.
<coherence> Steatopygia would seem to have been a characteristic of a population which once extended from the Gulf of Aden to the Cape of Good Hope, from which peoples the Khoisan and Pygmies may be remnants. Among the Khoisan, it begins in infancy and is fully developed by the time of the firstpregnancy.
coherence
0.9973665
973312
1
%DIFDELCMD < %DIFDELCMD < %%% It has been suggested that this feature was once more widespread.Paleolithic Venus figurines, sometimes referred to as "Steatopygian Venus" figures, discovered from Europe to Asia presenting a remarkable development of the thighs, and even the prolongation of the labia minora, have been used to support this theory. Whether these were intended to be lifelike, exaggeratory, or idealistic is unclear. These figures however may not qualify as steatopygian, since they exhibit an angle of approximately 120 degrees between the back and the buttocks, while steatopygia is diagnosed by modern medical standards at an angle of about 90 degrees only.
<meaning-changed> %DIFDELCMD < %DIFDELCMD < %%% It has been suggested that this feature was once more widespread.Paleolithic Venus figurines, sometimes referred to as "Steatopygian Venus" figures, discovered from Europe to Asia presenting a remarkable development of the thighs, and even the prolongation of the labia minora, have been used to support this theory. Whether these were intended to be lifelike, exaggeratory, or idealistic is unclear. These figures however may not qualify as steatopygian, since they exhibit an angle of approximately 120 degrees between the back and the buttocks, while steatopygia is diagnosed by modern medical standards at an angle of about 90 degrees only.
%DIFDELCMD < %DIFDELCMD < %%%
meaning-changed
0.9487765
973312
1
In Victorian England, freak shows often exploited women with steatopygia. One of the most well-known examples was a South African Khoikhoi woman named Saartjie Baartman, who is thought to have had lipedema.
<meaning-changed> In Victorian England, freak shows often exploited women with steatopygia. One of the most well-known examples was a South African Khoikhoi woman named Saartjie Baartman, who is thought to have had lipedema.
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first=Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc.co.uk|access-date=8 June 2016 who is thought to have had lipedema.
meaning-changed
0.9994796
973312
1
One of the most well-known examples was a South African Khoikhoi woman named Saartjie Baartman, who is thought to have had lipedema.
<meaning-changed> One of the most well-known examples was a South African Khoikhoi woman named Saartjie Baartman, who is thought to have had lipedema.
One of the most well-known examples was a South African Khoikhoi woman named Saartjie Baartman, </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
meaning-changed
0.99616635
973312
1
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
<coherence> nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
</ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
coherence
0.99598444
973312
2
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
<meaning-changed> nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 Steatopygia is the state of having substantial levels of tissue on the buttocks and thighs. This build is not confined to the gluteal regions, but extends to the outside and front of the thighs, and tapers to the knee producing a curvaceous figure. The term is from the Greek (), meaning "tallow", and (), meaning "rump". The Neolithic "Steatopygous Goddess from Pano Chorio", c. 5800–4800 BC, terracotta, Crete; whether she is really a goddess is uncertain. Steatopygia, a genetic characteristic leading to increased accumulation of adipose tissue in the buttock region, is found in some women of Sub-Saharan African origin, most notably (but not solely) among the Khoisan of Southern Africa and Pygmies of Central Africa. It has also been observed among the Andamanese people, such as the Onge tribe, in the Andaman Islands. This genetic characteristic is prevalent among women but also occurs to a lesser degree in men. who is thought to have had lipedema.
meaning-changed
0.9397646
973312
2
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
<meaning-changed> nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> Steatopygia would seem to have been a characteristic of a population which once extended from the Gulf of Aden to the Cape of Good Hope, from which peoples the Khoisan and Pygmies may be remnants. Among the Khoisan, it begins in infancy and is fully developed by the time of the first pregnancy. who is thought to have had lipedema.
meaning-changed
0.9970886
973312
2
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
<meaning-changed> nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> It has been suggested that this feature was once more widespread. Paleolithic Venus figurines, sometimes referred to as "Steatopygian Venus" figures, discovered from Europe to Asia presenting a remarkable development of the thighs, and even the prolongation of the labia minora, have been used to support this theory. Whether these were intended to be lifelike, exaggeratory, or idealistic is unclear. These figures however may not qualify as steatopygian, since they exhibit an angle of approximately 120 degrees between the back and the buttocks, while steatopygia is diagnosed by modern medical standards at an angle of about 90 degrees only. who is thought to have had lipedema.
meaning-changed
0.99852836
973312
2
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
<meaning-changed> nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> who is thought to have had lipedema.
nificance of Sarah Baartman|first =Justin Parkinson BBC News|last=Magazine|website=Bbc. co. uk|access-date=8 June 2016 </ref> In Victorian England, freak shows often exploited women with steatopygia. One of the most well-known examples was a South African Khoikhoi woman named Saartjie Baartman, who is thought to have had lipedema.
meaning-changed
0.9991303
973312
2
H. R. P. Dickson archive Papers by and relating to H. R. P. Dickson are held at the Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University (MECA reference: GB165-0085) web address URL The Catalogue for the Harold Dickson Collection is available online as a pdf file at URL
<meaning-changed> H. R. P. Dickson archive Papers by and relating to H. R. P. Dickson are held at the Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University (MECA reference: GB165-0085) web address URL The Catalogue for the Harold Dickson Collection is available online as a pdf file at URL
H. R. P. Dickson archive Papers by and relating to H. R. P. Dickson are held at the Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University (MECA reference: GB165-0085) .MEC Archive The Catalogue for the Harold Dickson Collection is available online as a pdf file at URL
meaning-changed
0.7346078
9736618
1
H. R. P. Dickson archive Papers by and relating to H. R. P. Dickson are held at the Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University (MECA reference: GB165-0085) web address URL The Catalogue for the Harold Dickson Collection is available online as a pdf file at URL
<coherence> H. R. P. Dickson archive Papers by and relating to H. R. P. Dickson are held at the Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University (MECA reference: GB165-0085) web address URL The Catalogue for the Harold Dickson Collection is available online as a pdf file at URL
H. R. P. Dickson archive Papers by and relating to H. R. P. Dickson are held at the Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University (MECA reference: GB165-0085) web address URL The Catalogue for the Harold Dickson Collection .Harold Dickson Collection
coherence
0.9889424
9736618
1