Part 1
Examinador
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidato
Yes, when I was a child I had a bike.
Examinador
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidato
Yes, uh, bikes are very popular in my country. A lot of children are. Uh, you're riding a bike when they were children.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Puntuación: 70.0Sugerencia: Ответ содержательный, но слишком короткий и простый. Стоит начать с прямого утверждения, затем добавить конкретную деталь (например, возраст, тип велосипеда или воспоминание), используя связку для плавности. Избегайте повтора слов и пустых пауз ('uh').
Ejemplo: Yes, I did. I got my first bike when I was eight — it was a red mountain bike that I used to ride around the park every weekend.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Puntuación: 55.0Sugerencia: Ответ содержит идеи, но неясен и грамматически некорректен. Нужно сформулировать тему, затем привести конкретные причины или примеры, используя связочные слова (for example, because, also). Уберите междометия ('uh') и исправьте согласование времен и местоимение.
Ejemplo: Yes, bikes are very popular in my country because many people use them for short trips and exercise. For example, children often learn to ride at a young age, and you can see entire families cycling together on weekends.
× Yes, uh, bikes are very popular in my country.
✓ Yes, bikes are very popular in my country.
The original sentence contains filler word 'uh' which is not a grammatical error but is unnecessary in written form; remove it for clarity and fluency. Maintain present simple tense to state a general fact.
× A lot of children are.
✓ A lot of children have them.
The fragment 'A lot of children are.' is incomplete and lacks a main verb and object. The intended meaning is possession of bikes, so use 'have them' to form a complete clause: 'A lot of children have them.' This fixes sentence structure and ensures subject-verb and object are present.
× Uh, you're riding a bike when they were children.
✓ They rode bikes when they were children.
The original mixes second-person 'you're riding' with third-person 'they were', producing a tense and subject mismatch. To talk about children in general in the past, use past simple with third-person plural: 'They rode bikes when they were children.' Remove filler 'uh' and ensure subject and tense agree.