自行车Part 1 评分报告

模考Part12026-06-12 22:44:11

对话

Part 1

考官

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

考生

No.

考官

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

考生

No.

评估

总分

总分: 5.0流畅度与连贯性: 5.0发音: 5.0语法: 5.0词汇: 5.0

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

分数: 20.0

建议: Give a direct answer but expand with 1–3 supporting sentences using specific details and linking words. Mention why you didn’t have a bike, any alternative transport you used, or a brief memory to make the answer natural and informative. Keep it under five sentences.

示例: No, I didn’t have a bike when I was a child. Instead, I usually walked to school because we lived close by, and my parents preferred to drive me when the weather was bad. I remember sometimes borrowing my neighbor’s bike for short rides at the park.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

分数: 25.0

建议: Answer directly and then explain with specific reasons, comparisons or examples, using linking words to connect ideas. For instance, say whether bikes are less common than cars or public transport, mention infrastructure or cultural factors, and give a short example. Stay natural and concise (max 5 sentences).

示例: No, I don’t think bikes are very popular in my country. Mainly people prefer cars and buses because city roads are crowded and there aren’t many safe bike lanes. For example, cycling is mostly seen in parks or among students rather than as a daily commuting choice.

语法

Sentence structure errors

× No.

No, I didn't.

The student’s response to 'Did you have a bike when you were a child?' is a one-word 'No.' which is grammatically acceptable in casual speech, but in the context of past simple question it is clearer and more natural to reply with a short form that repeats the auxiliary verb: 'No, I didn't.' This provides explicit subject and auxiliary to match the question tense and avoids ambiguity. Suggestion: when answering yes/no questions in past tense, include the auxiliary verb (did/didn't) and subject for clarity.

Present tense issue

× No.

No, I don't think so.

The examiner asked 'Do you think bikes are popular in your country?' which is present simple. A one-word 'No.' is short but abrupt; a more natural and grammatically complete reply is 'No, I don't think so,' which uses the present simple auxiliary 'do' and matches the question's tense. This makes the speaker's stance clear and grammatically aligned with the question. Suggestion: when answering present-tense opinion questions, use a short clause with the auxiliary (I don't think so) rather than a single word.

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