Answers

Feb 19, 2017 - 11:02 PM
There is no way to tell if Ihr is referring to "your" or "her" since it is the first word of the sentence.

Feb 22, 2017 - 07:46 AM
So it can go either way depending on the context? I wonder why Fluenz chose this specific statement since it can vary.

Mar 24, 2017 - 12:41 PM
Exactly, here it could mean either, since it starts the phrase.
When speaking to someone, you would also just hear "ihr" and not see if it has a capital letter or not, so we at Fluenz think it's important to prepare you for that kind of ambiguous words or phrases.
However, here it might be confusing because there's no reference, it is just an example, yet in real life you would generally know from the context which one it's referring to, so don't worry too much about it :)
When speaking to someone, you would also just hear "ihr" and not see if it has a capital letter or not, so we at Fluenz think it's important to prepare you for that kind of ambiguous words or phrases.
However, here it might be confusing because there's no reference, it is just an example, yet in real life you would generally know from the context which one it's referring to, so don't worry too much about it :)