Paragraph: (Science-textbook/science-g3-0.txt)
Sent 1: Static electricity is like a teeter-totter.
Sent 2: What happens if a teeter-totter is balanced?
Sent 3: Correct!
Sent 4: It does not move.
Sent 5: What about when its not balanced?
Sent 6: Yes, it will now begin to move.
Sent 7: Charges move when they are not balanced.
Sent 8: Charges can build up by friction.
Sent 9: Maybe you rub your feet on a wool mat or carpet.
Sent 10: Rubber soled shoes readily gain charges.
Sent 11: The wool carpet easily gives up charges.
Sent 12: The two items become unbalanced.
Sent 13: One item has a positive charge.
Sent 14: The other has a negative charge.
Sent 15: The difference in charge is called static electricity.
Sent 16: Just like the teeter-totter, something is going to move.
Sent 17: Positive charges build up on the mat.
Sent 18: Negative charges build up on you.
Question: When static electricity is balanced like a teeter-totter, what happens? (true/0)
Question: Does a teeter-totter move if it is balanced? (true/1)
Question: What happens if static electricity is not balanced? (true/2)
Question: If two items build unbalanced charges, the difference is called what? (true/3)
Question: What is an example of how charges build up by friction? (false/4)
Question: What kind of charge is required for static electricity? (false/5)
Question: What two types of charges build up in unbalanced items? (true/6)
Question: Charges can move when they are unbalanced by what? (true/7)
Question: What happens if a teeter-totter is balanced? (true/8)
Question: What kind of charges are needed to produce static electricity? (false/9)
Question: How are electrical charges similar to a teeter-totter? (true/10)
Question: What happens to static electricity if it is balanced? (true/11)
Question: When static electricity is not balanced, what happens to the charges? (false/12)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json