Part 1
Examiner
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidate
Yes, I owned a bicycle when I was a child and my bicycle is a red and it was very awesome.
Examiner
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidate
Yes, I think bikes are popular in my country, South Korea, because all the business women and businessmen are ride a bike when they go to their business. So I think these are popular in my country.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Score: 64.0Suggestion: 문장 구조와 시제 일관성이 필요합니다. 간단한 토픽 문장으로 직접 답한 뒤, 색깔과 감정 같은 구체적 세부사항을 연결어로 자연스럽게 덧붙이세요. 예를 들어 시제는 과거형으로 통일하고, 중복 표현(예: "my bicycle is a red")을 고치며 문장 수를 2~3문장으로 유지하세요.
Example: Yes, I had a bicycle when I was a child. It was a red bike and I loved it because it was small and easy to ride around my neighborhood.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Score: 58.0Suggestion: 문법(주어-동사 일치, 시제, 관사)과 표현의 자연스러움을 개선하세요. 'because' 절을 쓸 때 이유를 더 구체적으로 설명하고, 중복된 결론은 피하세요. 연결어를 사용해 논리적으로 전개하고 2~3문장으로 간결하게 말하세요.
Example: Yes, I think bicycles are quite popular in South Korea. Many office workers use bikes for short commutes because they are convenient and help avoid traffic, especially in busy city areas.
× Yes, I owned a bicycle when I was a child and my bicycle is a red and it was very awesome.
✓ Yes, I owned a bicycle when I was a child; my bicycle was red and it was very awesome.
The sentence incorrectly uses the definite article pattern 'my bicycle is a red' and mixes tenses. Use the past tense 'was' to match 'owned' and remove the indefinite article before a color adjective: say 'my bicycle was red.' Also separate the ideas with a semicolon or a conjunction to improve sentence structure. Suggestion: Keep consistent past tense (owned, was) and use 'red' without 'a' before a color adjective.
× Yes, I think bikes are popular in my country, South Korea, because all the business women and businessmen are ride a bike when they go to their business.
✓ Yes, I think bikes are popular in my country, South Korea, because businesswomen and businessmen ride bikes when they go to work.
The phrase 'are ride a bike' is grammatically incorrect: use the simple present 'ride' for habitual actions and ensure subject-verb agreement. 'Business women' should be one word 'businesswomen.' Use plural 'bikes' to match plural subjects. Replace 'go to their business' with 'go to work' for natural phrasing. Suggestion: Use simple present for routines ('ride'), match plurals, and use common collocations ('go to work').
× So I think these are popular in my country.
✓ So I think they are popular in my country.
The pronoun 'these' is awkward here because it lacks a clear nearby noun; 'they' refers back to 'bikes' more naturally. Also place 'popular' with 'they are' for standard English word order. Suggestion: Use 'they' to refer back to previously mentioned plural noun 'bikes' and keep standard subject-verb order.