Part 1
시험관
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
수험생
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
시험관
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
수험생
Yes, I believe everyone has a bike in my country.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
점수: 20.0제안: Responda diretamente à pergunta com uma sentença afirmativa ou negativa e adicione detalhes relevantes. Use uma estrutura simples: tópico + 1–2 detalhes de apoio (onde, com quem, por que gostava). Evite repetir a pergunta. Mantenha no máximo 3–4 frases e use conectores como "because" ou "and" para coerência.
예시: Yes, I had a bike when I was a child. I used it every day to ride to my friend’s house and to explore the neighborhood. I loved it because it gave me freedom and helped me stay active.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
점수: 45.0제안: Comece com uma resposta direta e, em seguida, explique com detalhes específicos e exemplos. Evite generalizações absolutas like "everyone" unless you justify them. Use conectores como "however", "because" ou "for example" para tornar a resposta mais lógica e natural. Limite a resposta a 2–4 frases.
예시: Yes, bikes are quite popular in my country because many people use them for short trips and commuting. For example, in my city many students and office workers cycle to save money and avoid traffic. However, car use is rising in bigger cities, so bike popularity varies by region.
× Did you have a bike when you were a child?
✓ Yes, I did.
The student repeated the examiner's question instead of answering. This is a sentence structure error (26). The appropriate response to a past simple yes/no question uses 'Yes, I did' or 'No, I didn't.' Suggestion: answer directly using the correct auxiliary for past simple (did) followed by the base verb if adding more detail, e.g. 'Yes, I did. I had a bike when I was a child.'
× Yes, I believe everyone has a bike in my country.
✓ Yes, I believe many people have bikes in my country.
The original sentence makes an overgeneralization using 'everyone has' which is factually unlikely and uses singular 'a bike' awkwardly for a general statement. This falls under present tense/quantity usage (6 and 14), but per instruction we report the primary issue as Present tense issue (6). Suggestion: use 'many people' or 'most people' for a realistic generalization and plural 'bikes' for natural collocation, e.g. 'many people have bikes.'