Part 1
시험관
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
수험생
Did you have a bite when you were a child?
시험관
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
수험생
Do you think bikes are popular in the country?
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
점수: 30.0제안: Bạn đã phát âm sai từ khoá (bike -> bite) và câu trả lời thiếu nội dung. Hãy trả lời trực tiếp câu hỏi với một câu chủ đề, sau đó thêm 1–2 câu chi tiết cụ thể (ví dụ: ai tặng, khi nào, bạn dùng để làm gì). Sử dụng từ nối hợp lý nếu cần. Giữ tổng số câu không quá 5 câu và dùng từ vựng phù hợp.
예시: Yes, I had a bike when I was about seven. My parents bought it for me as a birthday present, and I rode it every day around my neighborhood. It helped me gain confidence and independence, and I often raced with my friends after school.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
점수: 40.0제안: Bạn chỉ lặp lại câu hỏi của người kiểm tra thay vì trả lời. Hãy đưa ra một câu trả lời trực tiếp (yes/no or short opinion), rồi giải thích với 1–2 câu chi tiết cụ thể (ví dụ: mức độ sử dụng, lý do phổ biến/không phổ biến, vùng thành phố hay nông thôn). Dùng từ nối để liên kết ý (for example, because, therefore).
예시: Yes, I think bikes are quite popular in my country, especially in small towns and among students. For example, many people use bicycles to commute short distances because they are cheap and convenient, though in big cities cars and motorbikes are more common due to traffic.
× Did you have a bite when you were a child?
✓ Did you have a bike when you were a child?
The student used 'bite' instead of 'bike', which is a vocabulary/pronunciation mistake, not a grammar rule from the provided list. Replace the incorrect word with the correct noun 'bike' to match the examiner's question; the tense and structure are already correct.
× Do you think bikes are popular in the country?
✓ Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Using 'the country' is ambiguous and less natural here; 'your country' correctly refers to the student's country mentioned by the examiner. This is an article/pronoun/context usage issue: change 'the' to 'your' to make the reference clear and natural in response to the examiner's question.