1. His words and mine. 2. My voice and his. 3. The Frenchman's words and yours alarmed me. 4. My bottles are new, his are not new. 5. They have drunk five bottles of our wine, and five and a half of his. 6. This is her wine. 7. This is the door of their drug-store. 8. The door of my drug-store and of his. 9. This chair is not theirs, it is mine. 10. These chairs are not ours, but hers.

XII. USE OF usted

[PAGE 43], LINES 1-11

1. He is going to relate to you a historic episode. 2. You are going to relate the episode to him. 3. The episode is not historic and it is not we who will relate it to you. 4. It is not you who related it to her. 5. We do not ask of you that you relate it to us. 6. You will not ask of us that we relate it to you. 7. You will not take upon yourself the trouble to tell it to them.

XIII. COMPOUND TENSES

[PAGE 46], LINES 34-9 (page 47)

1. We have gone out of the café. 2. As he has told you, they had left the café. 3. Two dusty carriages have stopped before the house. 4. They will have stopped in front of your house. 5. I would have stopped in front of her house. 6. The carriage has stopped. 7. As I have said, they had approached the door of the house. 8. We had alighted and would have approached the house.

XIV. PERSONAL a

[PAGE 50], LINES 28-14 (page 51)

1. The people saw the priest. 2. He saw them and he saw the captives also. 3. The captives did not see the strangers. 4. The captive will behold Napoleon. 5. She has seen our two companions. 6. He had abandoned his companion. 7. We have not abandoned our companions. 8. I saw the captives and the stranger. 9. I saw the guitar and the captive who was playing it. 10. We left Catalonia.