Question: Information:  - Paris (French: ) is the capital and most populous city of France. It has an area of and a population in 2013 of 2,229,621 within its administrative limits. The city is both a commune and department, and forms the centre and headquarters of the Île-de-France, or Paris Region, which has an area of and a population in 2014 of 12,005,077, comprising 18.2 percent of the population of France.  - France, officially the French Republic, is a country with territory in western Europe and several overseas regions and territories. The European, or metropolitan, area of France extends from the Mediterranean Sea to the English Channel and the North Sea, and from the Rhine to the Atlantic Ocean. Overseas France include French Guiana on the South American continent and several island territories in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans. France spans and had a total population of almost 67 million people as of January 2017. It is a unitary semi-presidential republic with the capital in Paris, the country's largest city and main cultural and commercial centre. Other major urban centres include Marseille, Lyon, Lille, Nice, Toulouse and Bordeaux.  - Association Sportive de Cannes Football (commonly referred to as AS Cannes or simply Cannes) is a French association football club based in Cannes. The club was formed 1902 as a sports club and currently plays in the Championnat de France amateur, the fourth division of French football. Cannes plays its home matches at the Stade Pierre de Coubertin, located within the city. The team is managed by Jean-Marc Pilorget and captained by defender Vincent Di Bartoloméo.  - Ibrahim Aoudou ( 23 August 1955 in Mbalmayo ) is a retired Cameroonian professional footballer . He competed for the Cameroon national football team at the 1982 FIFA World Cup as a winger . At a club level , he played his football in France for AS Cannes . Aoudou also competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics . In 2006 , he was selected by CAF as one of the best 200 African football players of the last 50 years .    What is the relationship between 'ibrahim aoudou' and 'defender'?
Answer: position played on team / speciality

Question: Information:  - Russian orthography is formally considered to encompass spelling and punctuation. Russian spelling, which is quite phonemic in practice, is a mix of the "morphological" and "phonetic" principles, with a few "etymological" or "historic" forms, and occasional "grammatical" differentiation. The punctuation, originally based on Byzantine Greek, was in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries reformulated on the French and German models.  - The letter  (italics "", "") of the Cyrillic script, also spelled jer or er, is known as the "hard sign" (  ) in the modern Russian and Rusyn alphabets, as "er golyam" ( , "big er") in the Bulgarian alphabet, and as "debelo jer" ( , "fat yer") in pre-reform Serbian orthography. The letter is called back yer or back er in the pre-reform Russian orthography, in Old Russian, and in Old Church Slavonic. Originally the yer denoted an ultra-short or reduced middle rounded vowel. It is one of two reduced vowels that are collectively known as the yers in Slavic philology.  - Old Church Slavonic, also known as Old Church Slavic (often abbreviated to OCS; self-name , "slovnsk jzyk"), was the first Slavic literary language. The 9th-century Byzantine missionaries Saints Cyril and Methodius of Slavic, Greek descent, or both, are credited with standardizing the language and using it in translating the Bible and other Ancient Greek ecclesiastical texts as part of the Christianization of the Slavs. It is thought to have been based primarily on the dialect of the 9th century Byzantine Slavs living in the Province of Thessalonica (now in Greece). It played an important role in the history of the Slavic languages and served as a basis and model for later Church Slavonic traditions, and some Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic churches use this later Church Slavonic as a liturgical language to this day. As the oldest attested Slavic language, OCS provides important evidence for the features of Proto-Slavic, the reconstructed common ancestor of all Slavic languages. History. The language was standardized for the mission of the two apostles to Great Moravia in 863 (see Glagolitic alphabet for details). For that purpose, Cyril and his brother Methodius started to translate religious literature to Old Church Slavonic, allegedly based on the Slavic dialects spoken in the hinterland of their hometown, Thessaloniki, in the today's Greece.  - Neutral Yer ( Majuscule :  , Minuscule :  ) is used in transcribing documents when it is hard to tell the difference between a  and a  . It was common in Late Medieval Russian archival materials and scripts . The appearance looks like a Yer with a hook on the top .  - A yer is one of two letters in Cyrillic alphabets, namely  (, "jer") and  (, "jer"). The Glagolitic alphabet used as their respective counterparts the letters and . They originally represented phonemically the "ultra-short" vowels in Slavic languages (including Old Church Slavonic), collectively known as the yers. In all Slavic languages they either evolved into various "full" vowels or disappeared, in some cases leaving palatalization of adjacent consonants. At present, the only Slavic language that uses "" as a vowel sign (pronounced //) is Bulgarian (although in many cases it corresponds to earlier "", originally pronounced /õ/). Many languages using the Cyrillic alphabet have kept one or more of the yers to serve specific orthographic functions.  - The Bulgarian alphabet is used to write the Bulgarian language.  - The Cyrillic script is a writing system used for various alphabets across eastern Europe and north and central Asia. It is based on the Early Cyrillic, which was developed in the First Bulgarian Empire during the 9th century AD at the Preslav Literary School. It is the basis of alphabets used in various languages, past and present, in parts of southeastern Europe and northern Eurasia, especially those of Slavic origin, and non-Slavic languages influenced by Russian. , around 252 million people in Eurasia use it as the official alphabet for their national languages, with Russia accounting for about half of them. With the accession of Bulgaria to the European Union on 1 January 2007, Cyrillic became the third official script of the European Union, following the Latin script and Greek script.    What is the relationship between 'neutral yer' and 'cyrillic script'?
Answer:
part of