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Delimiter between question and answer:

Tips:

  • No column headers.
  • Each line maps to a question.
  • If the delimiter is used in a question, the question should be surrounded by double quotes: "My, question","My, answer"
  • The first answer in the multiple choice question must be the correct answer.






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"Should we take a taxi or walk?" she asked.
She asked if/whether they should take a taxi or walk.
"May I borrow your pen?" the student asked.
The student asked if/whether they might borrow my pen.
"Will they be back by 6 p.m.?" he asked.
He asked if/whether they would be back by 6 p.m.
"Are you going to the concert tonight?" she asked.
She asked if/whether I was going to the concert that night.
"Have you ever been to Paris?" he asked.
He asked if/whether I had ever been to Paris.
"Did they finish their work on time?" the manager asked.
The manager asked if/whether they had finished their work on time.
"Does he live in London?" she asked.
She asked if/whether he lived in London.
"Can you help me with my homework?" she asked.
She asked if/ whether I could help her with her homework.
"Is she coming to the party?" he asked.
He asked if/whether she was coming to the party.
"Do you like pizza?" he asked.
He asked if/whether I liked pizza.
"I need to finish this project by Friday," she said.
She said that she needed to finish that project by Friday.
"They may join us later," he said.
He said that they might join them later.
"I can speak three languages," she said.
She said that she could speak three languages.
"You must study more," my teacher told me.
My teacher told me that I had to study more.
"She had already left before I arrived," Tom said.
Tom said that she had already left before he arrived.
"She doesn't like chocolate," Mark said.
Mark said that she didn’t like chocolate.
"We have finished our homework," they said.
They said that they had finished their homework.
"He will come to the party," John said.
John said that he would come to the party.
"How many people came to the meeting?" he asked.
He asked how many people had come to the meeting.
"How much does it cost?" she asked.
She asked how much it cost.
"Whose bag is this?" the teacher asked.
The teacher asked whose bag that was.
"Which book do you recommend?" he asked.
He asked which book I recommended.
"When will the train arrive?" she asked.
She asked when the train would arrive.
"How do you solve this problem?" the student asked.
The student asked how I solved that problem.
"Who is your best friend?" she asked.
She asked who my best friend was.
"Why are they late?" the teacher asked.
The teacher asked why they were late.
"What did she say?" I asked.
I asked what she had said.
"I love learning English," she said.
She said that she loved learning English.