Question:
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.
old coachman
his
OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
-----
Answer:
yes

Q: It is not easy to space buttonholes exactly the same distance apart, and it is very difficult to cut them precisely the right size . The tiniest slip of the scissors will make the hole too large, and even one thread uncut will leave *it* too small.
Are "slip" and "it" the same? OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
=======
A: no

Question: Given context:I sat there feeling rather like a chappie I'd once read about in a book , who murdered another cove and hid the body under the dining-room table , and then had to be the life and soul of a dinner party, with *it* there all the time.

1: table; 2: it
OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
Answer: no

Problem: The painting in Mark's living room shows an oak tree. *It* is to the right of the bookcase.

Do "It" and "The painting" mean the same thing? OPTIONS:
- no
- yes

Answer: yes

Problem: Do "Bill" and "him" point to the same thing in the following sentence?

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.

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
****
A: yes

Problem: Do "Eric" and "he" point to the same thing in the following sentence?

George got free tickets to the play, but he gave them to Eric , because *he* was particularly eager to see it.

OPTIONS:
- no
- yes
****
A:
yes