(Q).
Information:  - Cockburn City Soccer Club is an Australian soccer club currently playing in the National Premier Leagues Western Australia . They play their home games at Dalmatinac Park and train at Beale Park .  - Football West is the state governing body for association football (soccer) in Western Australia (WA). It is affiliated with the Football Federation Australia (FFA), the sport's national governing body, and through FFA's affiliation to FIFA. Football West's premier competition is the National Premier Leagues (NPL) WA, which is the highest league in WA and one tier below the national A-League. NPL WA is a division within the National Premier Leagues. Football West is also responsible for running Western Australia's National Training Centre in conjunction with FFA and the Department of Sport and Recreation (DRS) of WA. Football West also run the Football West State Cup knock-out cup. Since 2014 the two State Cup finalists also qualify for the FFA Cup.  - The National Premier Leagues Western Australia is a regional Australian semi-professional soccer league comprising teams from Western Australia. The league name is often abbreviated to NPL Western Australia or NPL WA. As a subdivision of the National Premier Leagues, the league is sits at the highest level of the Western Australian league system (Level 2 of the overall Australian league system). The competition is administered by Football West, the governing body of the sport in the state. In 2014, the league  formerly known as the Football West State League Premier Division  was rebranded into what exists today.    Given the information above, choose from the list below the object entity that exhibits the relation 'sport' with the subject 'cockburn city sc'.  Choices: - association football  - football  - sport
(A).
association football


(Q).
Information:  - Marie Antoinette (, ,  born Maria Antonia Josepha Johanna (2 November 1755  16 October 1793), was the last Queen of France prior to the French Revolution. She was born an Archduchess of Austria, and was the fifteenth and second youngest child of Empress Maria Theresa and Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor.  - Louis XVI (23 August 1754  21 January 1793), born Louis-Auguste, also known as Louis Capet, was King of France from 1774 until his deposition in 1792, although his formal title after 1791 was King of the French. He was guillotined on 21 January 1793. His father, Louis, Dauphin of France, was the son and heir apparent of Louis XV of France, but his father died in 1765, and Louis succeeded his grandfather as king in 1774.  - Louis XVII ( 27 March 1785 in Versailles -- 8 June 1795 in Paris ) , from birth to 1789 known as Louis - Charles , Duke of Normandy ; then from 1789 to 1791 as Louis - Charles , Dauphin of France ; and from 1791 to 1792 as Louis - Charles , Prince Royal of France , was the younger son of King Louis XVI of France and Queen Marie Antoinette . As the son of the king , he was a Fils de France ( Son of France ) . His older brother , Louis Joseph , died in June 1789 , just a few weeks before the start of the French Revolution . When his father was executed on 21 January 1793 , during the middle - period of the French Revolution , he became ( nominally ) King of France and Navarre in the eyes of the royalists . However , since France was by then a republic , and Louis XVII had been imprisoned from August 1792 until his death from illness in 1795 at the age of 10 , he was never officially king , nor did he rule . His title was bestowed by his royalist supporters and acknowledged implicitly by his uncle 's later adoption of the regnal name Louis XVIII rather than Louis XVII , upon the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in 1814 .  - The Duchy of Normandy grew out of the 911 Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte between King Charles III of West Francia and Rollo, leader of the Vikings. From 1066 until 1204 it was held by the kings of England, except for the brief rule of Robert Curthose (10871106) and Geoffrey Plantagenet (11441150). Normandy was declared forfeit by Philip II of France in 1202, and seized by force of arms in 1204. It remained disputed territory until the Treaty of Paris of 1259, when the English sovereigns ceded their claim, except for the Channel Islands.  - Louis XV (15 February 1710  10 May 1774), known as Louis the Beloved ("Louis le bien aimé"), was a monarch of the House of Bourbon who ruled as King of France from 1 September 1715 until his death. He succeeded his great-grandfather Louis XIV at the age of five. Until he reached maturity in 1723, his kingdom was ruled by Philippe d'Orléans, Duke of Orléans as Regent of France; the duke was his maternal great-uncle, as well as first cousin twice removed patrilineally. Cardinal Fleury was his chief minister from 1726 until the Cardinal's death in 1743, at which time the young king took sole control of the kingdom.   - Francis I (; 8 December 1708  18 August 1765) was Holy Roman Emperor and Grand Duke of Tuscany, though his wife effectively executed the real powers of those positions. With his wife, Maria Theresa, he was the founder of the Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty. From 1728 until 1737 he was Duke of Lorraine. In 1737, Lorraine became managed by France under terms resulting from the War of the Polish Succession. Francis and the House of Lorraine received the Grand Duchy of Tuscany in the peace treaty that ended that war. After taking the throne of the Holy Roman Empire, the return of the ancestral duchy of Lorraine went nominally to his brother Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine (who was however engaged in ruling the Austrian Netherlands), until succession under derivate house alliances resulted in Lorraine's annexation to France in 1766.  - In the Middle Ages, the Duke of Normandy was the ruler of the Duchy of Normandy in northwestern France. The duchy arose out of a grant of land to the Viking leader Rollo by the French king Charles III in 911. In 924 and again in 933, Normandy was expanded by royal grant. Rollo's male-line descendants continued to rule it down to 1135. In 1202 the French king Philip II declared Normandy forfeit and by 1204 his army had conquered it. It remained a French royal province thereafter, still called the Duchy of Normandy, but only occasionally granted to a duke of the royal house as a apanage.    Given the information above, choose from the list below the object entity that exhibits the relation 'noble family' with the subject 'louis xvii of france'.  Choices: - house of bourbon  - house of lorraine  - sur
(A).
house of bourbon