BikePart 1 Báo cáo

Mô phỏngPart12026-06-16 07:30:26

Cuộc hội thoại

Part 1

Giám khảo

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Thí sinh

Oh yes, I have a bike when I was younger.

Giám khảo

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Thí sinh

Oh yes, of course. So most of the population in my country is a bike to ride for everywhere. Some people use a bike to go to the job, some people use some bike to practice sports, some people who bike to go to the beach. I live in in a continent.

Đánh giá

Tổng

Tổng: 5.5Trôi chảy và mạch lạc: 5.5Phát âm: 5.5Ngữ pháp: 5.0Từ vựng: 5.5

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Điểm: 45.0

Gợi ý: Be direct, use correct tense and natural phrasing, and add one brief supporting detail. Keep it within 1–3 sentences. For example, use past tense: “I did have a bike when I was a child.” Then add a short detail (what kind, how you used it).

Ví dụ: I did have a bike when I was a child. It was a small blue mountain bike, and I used it to ride to school and explore my neighborhood with friends.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Điểm: 40.0

Gợi ý: Answer directly, correct grammar, use linking words and specific examples, and avoid redundancy. Start with a clear topic sentence, then add 1–2 specific supporting reasons using linking words (e.g., “For example,” “Also,” “because”). Remove irrelevant or unclear statements (e.g., “I live in a continent”).

Ví dụ: Yes, bikes are very popular in my country because they are cheap and convenient. For example, many people cycle to work to avoid traffic, and others ride for exercise or leisure on weekends along the coast.

Ngữ pháp

Present tense issue

× Oh yes, I have a bike when I was younger.

Oh yes, I had a bike when I was younger.

The sentence refers to a past time ('when I was younger') but uses the present tense verb 'have'. This is a tense inconsistency. Use the past simple 'had' to match the past time reference. Suggestion: use 'had' for possessions in the past: 'I had a bike when I was younger.'

Subject-verb agreement errors

× So most of the population in my country is a bike to ride for everywhere.

So most of the people in my country use bikes to get around everywhere.

'Population' as a collective noun with 'is a bike' is incorrect and the verb phrase doesn't agree with the subject. The intended meaning is habitual action by many people, so use plural noun 'people' and plural 'bikes' and the verb 'use' for present habitual. Also 'to ride for everywhere' is ungrammatical; use 'to get around' or 'to travel' instead.

Incorrect use of prepositions

× Some people use a bike to go to the job, some people use some bike to practice sports, some people who bike to go to the beach.

Some people use a bike to go to work, some people use bikes to exercise, and some people ride bikes to go to the beach.

Several preposition and article errors: 'go to the job' should be 'go to work'; 'use some bike' is wrong—use plural 'bikes' or 'a bike'; 'practice sports' is awkward—use 'exercise' or 'play sports'; the third clause lacked a proper verb form and conjunction. Also maintain parallel structure: 'Some people use..., some people use..., and some people ride...'. This fixes preposition and article misuse and improves clarity.

Sentence structure errors

× I live in in a continent.

I live on a continent.

The phrase 'in in a continent' has a repetition and wrong preposition. For landmasses like continents, English uses 'on' (e.g., 'I live on a continent' or better specify which continent: 'I live in Asia'). Remove the duplicate 'in' and choose correct preposition; specify the continent when possible for clarity.

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