QUESTION: Is "new groom" the same as "his" in this sentence?
Sir Clifford wants me to find him a new groom , about twenty or twenty-one, who knows his business. His old coachman is getting feeble, and he wants a man to work with him and get into *his* ways, who would be able, when the old man was pensioned off, to step into his place.

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
ANS: no

Problem: Jane knocked on Susan 's door but *she* did not answer.
Are "she" and "Susan" the same?
OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
****
Answer: yes

Problem: Bob was playing cards with Adam and was way ahead. If Adam hadn't had a sudden run of good luck, *he* would have lost.

Are "he" and "Bob" the same?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
Answer: no

Q: OPTIONS:
- no
- yes.

The boy continued to whip the pony , and eventually the pony threw him over. John laughed out quite loud. "Served *him* right," he said.

Do "him" and "boy" mean the same thing?
A: yes

CONTEXT: Anne gave birth to a daughter last month. *She* is a very charming woman.

Multi-choice question: Do "Anne" and "She" have the same meaning?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
yes

CONTEXT: When my parents died, I was not earning enough to keep myself or my crippled sister Nelly , and without our kind mistress , we would have gone to the poorhouse. Nelly calls *her* her angel and she has good right to do so. her

Multi-choice question: Do "mistress" and "her" have the same meaning?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
yes