QUESTION: Is "Tatyana" the same as "her" in this sentence?
Tatyana knew that Grandma always enjoyed serving an abundance of food to *her* guests. Now Tatyana watched as Grandma gathered Tatyana 's small mother into a wide, scrawny embrace and then propelled her to the table, lifting her shawl from her shoulders, seating her in the place of honor, and saying simply: "There's plenty."

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
ANS: no

Problem: The table was piled high with food , and on the floor beside *it* there were crocks, baskets, and a five-quart pail of milk.
Are "it" and "food" the same?
OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
****
Answer: no

Problem: I couldn't put the pot on the shelf because *it* was too high.

Are "it" and "the pot" the same?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
Answer: no

Q: OPTIONS:
- no
- yes.

As Ollie carried Tommy up the long winding steps, *his* legs ached.

Do "his" and "Tommy" mean the same thing?
A: no

CONTEXT: Bob paid for Charlie 's college education, but now Charlie acts as though it never happened. *He* is very ungrateful.

Multi-choice question: Do "Charlie" and "He" have the same meaning?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
yes

Problem: After I saw Bill catching flies and pulling off their wings, I boxed his ears. I showed the master the flies, some crushed and some crawling about helpless, and I showed him the wings on the window sill. I never saw *him* so angry before; but as Bill was still howling and whining, like the coward that he was, he did not give him any more punishment of that kind, but set him up on a stool for the rest of the afternoon, and said that he should not go out to play for that week.

Are "him" and "Bill" the same?

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
Answer:
no