BikePart 1 Báo cáo

Mô phỏngPart12026-06-05 13:08:23

Cuộc hội thoại

Part 1

Giám khảo

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Thí sinh

I haven't had a bike when I was a child and I haven't had the chance to learn how to bike.

Giám khảo

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Thí sinh

Yes, I think bikes are really popular in your country as one, as one of my my observations, almost half or seven of a percent of the population in our community with the same age of mine are using our Yeah.

Đánh giá

Tổng

Tổng: 6.0Trôi chảy và mạch lạc: 6.0Phát âm: 6.0Ngữ pháp: 5.5Từ vựng: 6.0

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Điểm: 40.0

Gợi ý: Give a direct, past-focused answer using correct tense and a clear topic sentence. Briefly add one or two specific details (reason or consequence). Use simple linking words and correct grammar (e.g., "I didn't have" not "I haven't had"). Keep it under 3 sentences.

Ví dụ: No, I didn’t have a bike when I was a child. As a result, I never learned to cycle properly, because my family lived in a busy city where it wasn’t safe to ride.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Điểm: 35.0

Gợi ý: Answer directly and clearly with accurate facts or a clear estimate. Use linking words for clarity and correct phrasing (e.g., "I think bikes are popular in my country"). Avoid vague numbers and repetitions; if giving statistics, state them clearly. Keep it to 2–3 concise sentences.

Ví dụ: Yes, I think bikes are quite popular in my country. For example, many young people use bicycles for commuting to work or university, and in my community roughly 30–40% of people my age cycle regularly.

Ngữ pháp

Present perfect vs past simple; tense consistency

× I haven't had a bike when I was a child and I haven't had the chance to learn how to bike.

I didn't have a bike when I was a child, and I didn't have the chance to learn how to ride a bike.

The sentence mixes present perfect ('haven't had') with a past time expression ('when I was a child'), which is incorrect. Use past simple ('didn't have') for completed past situations. Also 'learn how to bike' is awkward; use 'learn how to ride a bike' or 'learn to ride a bike.' Replace the second 'haven't had' with 'didn't have' for parallel past tense. Suggestion: use past simple for past time references and use the verb phrase 'ride a bike.'

Pronoun and possessive reference; word choice and sentence clarity

× Yes, I think bikes are really popular in your country as one, as one of my my observations, almost half or seven of a percent of the population in our community with the same age of mine are using our Yeah.

Yes, I think bikes are really popular in my country. From my observations, almost half of the people in my age group in our community use them.

Multiple issues: the speaker incorrectly said 'your country' instead of 'my country' when speaking about their own country (incorrect pronoun/possessive), repeated 'as one, as one' and duplicated 'my' (word repetition), and used a confusing and incorrect quantifier phrase 'seven of a percent.' Also 'with the same age of mine' is ungrammatical; use 'in my age group' or 'people my age.' The verb phrase 'are using our Yeah' is incomplete and unclear; use 'use them' referring to bikes. Corrections: change 'your' to 'my' for correct reference, remove repetitions, use 'From my observations' to introduce an observation, use 'almost half' (not 'almost half or seven of a percent'), and 'people in my age group use them.'

Từ vựng trọng tâm

PopularWell-liked; Nonspecialist; Widespread; Mass
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