QUESTION: Is "Folks" the same as "their" in this sentence?
The Wainwrights treated Mr. Crowley like a prince until he made his will in their favor; then they treated him like dirt. Folks said he died just to be rid of *their* everlasting nagging.

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
ANS: no

Problem: Our mistress hired a room for my crippled sister Nelly , and she gave *her* knitting and needlework when she was able to do it, and when she was ill she sent her dinners and many nice comfortable things and was like a mother to her.
Are "her" and "Nelly" the same?
OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
****
Answer: yes

Problem: The drain is clogged with hair. *It* has to be removed.

Are "It" and "The drain" the same?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
Answer: no

Q: OPTIONS:
- no
- yes.

Tom said "Check" to Ralph as he moved *his* bishop.

Do "his" and "Tom" mean the same thing?
A: yes

CONTEXT: The sculpture rolled off the shelf because *it* wasn't anchored.

Multi-choice question: Do "the shelf" and "it" have the same meaning?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
no

QUESTION: Is "Tom" the same as "he" in this sentence?
Tom threw his schoolbag down to Ray after *he* reached the bottom of the stairs.

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
ANS:
no