BikePart 1 Report

MockPart12026-04-25 07:27:01

Conversation

Part 1

Examiner

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Candidate

Yes, I did.

Examiner

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Candidate

Well, maybe I can tell you that in our country by. Are not so popular as you think.

Evaluation

Overall

Overall: 5.5Fluency & Coherence: 5.5Pronunciation: 5.5Grammar: 5.0Lexical Resource: 5.5

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Score: 70.0

Suggestion: Expand your answer with a brief topic sentence and one or two supporting details. Mention what kind of bike it was, how you used it, or a short memory to make your response more natural and engaging. Keep it under five sentences and use linking words like "and" or "so" to connect ideas.

Example: Yes, I did. It was a small red bicycle with training wheels, and I rode it around my neighborhood every afternoon. I learned to balance on it when I was six, so it became my favorite way to play outdoors.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Score: 40.0

Suggestion: Give a clear direct response first (yes or no), then support it with specific reasons and examples. Avoid fragmented sentences and unclear phrasing. Use linking words such as "however", "because", or "for example" to make the answer coherent. Aim for 2–4 polished sentences.

Example: I don't think bikes are very popular in my country. For example, many people prefer cars and public transport because cities are busy and road safety is a concern. However, cycling is becoming more common in some areas as people try to exercise and avoid traffic.

Grammar

Sentence structure errors

× Well, maybe I can tell you that in our country by.

Well, maybe I can tell you that about our country.

The original sentence has incorrect word order and an unnecessary preposition 'by'. This is a sentence structure and preposition misuse issue. Use 'about' to indicate the topic (our country) and place it after 'tell you' forming 'tell you about our country'. Also 'maybe' and 'well' are fine but keep natural flow: 'Well, maybe I can tell you about our country.'

Sentence structure errors

× Are not so popular as you think.

Bicycles are not as popular as you might think.

The original sentence lacks a subject and auxiliary verb, creating a sentence without a proper verb phrase. This is a sentence structure error and subject-verb omission. Add a subject ('Bicycles' or 'They') and the auxiliary 'are' and use the comparative structure 'not as ... as'. 'You might think' is a natural modal suggestion. The corrected sentence: 'Bicycles are not as popular as you might think.'

Vocabulary

PopularWell-liked; Nonspecialist; Widespread; Mass
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