BikePart 1 Report

MockPart12026-06-22 05:42:50

Conversation

Part 1

Examiner

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Candidate

Yes, I had a bike when I was child.

Examiner

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Candidate

No, I don't think in my country is a car that are popular.

Evaluation

Overall

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

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Score: 65.0

Suggestion: Formulez la réponse avec une structure complète et naturelle. Commencez par une phrase sujet claire, corrigez les erreurs grammaticales (par ex. "when I was a child") et ajoutez un détail spécifique et pertinent pour enrichir la réponse sans être trop long. Utilisez un mot de liaison si vous donnez une précision.

Example: Yes, I did — I had a red bicycle when I was a child. It was a simple, single-speed bike and I used to ride it to school almost every day, which helped me be more independent.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Score: 50.0

Suggestion: Répondez directement et corrigez la grammaire et l'ordre des mots. Si vous comparez voitures et vélos, utilisez des phrases claires et un lien logique (par exemple "however" ou "because") et fournissez une raison spécifique ou un exemple pour appuyer votre opinion.

Example: Not really. Cars are much more popular in my country because public transport is limited and families prefer cars for convenience. However, bicycles are becoming more common in cities among students and cyclists.

Grammar

Singular and plural issue

× Yes, I had a bike when I was child.

Yes, I had a bike when I was a child.

The noun 'child' requires the indefinite article 'a' when singular. Add 'a' to form 'a child' to indicate one instance; otherwise the sentence is ungrammatical. Suggestion: include appropriate articles before singular countable nouns (e.g., 'a child', 'an apple').

Subject-verb agreement errors

× No, I don't think in my country is a car that are popular.

No, I don't think cars are popular in my country.

The original sentence has incorrect word order and subject-verb agreement: 'a car that are' mixes singular noun with plural verb. Rephrase to make 'cars' the subject that agrees with the plural verb 'are' and place the location phrase 'in my country' at the end for natural English word order. Alternative correction preserving singular: 'No, I don't think a car is popular in my country.' But context asks about general popularity, so plural is better.

Vocabulary

PopularWell-liked; Nonspecialist; Widespread; Mass
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