Part 1
Examiner
Do you always bring a lot of keys with you?
Candidate
No, I seldom breed a lot of kids with you with me because I think, uh, I am a easy forecast person. If I miss my my key, I will lose a lot of keys, then it would be a trouble.
Examiner
Have you ever lost your keys?
Candidate
No I have never lose my keys but I have I had a experience is was that I forgot where the key I place placed but but after well fortunately I find it.
Examiner
Do you often forget the keys and lock yourself out?
Candidate
MMM no but I had an experience that forgot the key and locked myself out in the resolution is was that I called my landlord and helped her help to help me assist me to.
Examiner
Do you think it's a good idea to leave your keys with a neighbour?
Candidate
No, I think it is dangerous because if they have if my neighbors has my house key, they will go, they will come in my house when I in when I am not staying in my house then I will lose some valuable.
Do you always bring a lot of keys with you?
Score: 45.0Suggestion: Clarify meaning and avoid major pronunciation and word-choice errors. Start with a clear topic sentence directly answering the question, then give one brief reason using correct vocabulary. Keep it under 3–4 short sentences and avoid unrelated words (e.g., "breed," "kids").
Example: No, I usually carry only one or two keys. I prefer to travel light and keep important keys on my main keyring so I don’t lose them.
Have you ever lost your keys?
Score: 50.0Suggestion: Use correct verb forms and a clear timeline. Begin with a direct answer, then briefly describe the past incident using past simple with correct verbs and linking words like "but" and "fortunately." Keep sentences concise.
Example: No, I have never completely lost my keys. Once I misplaced them at a café, but fortunately I found them there an hour later.
Do you often forget the keys and lock yourself out?
Score: 48.0Suggestion: Give a direct answer, then describe the event with clear sequence and natural linking words (e.g., "then", "so"). Use correct pronouns and verbs, and avoid repetitive filler words. Mention outcome succinctly.
Example: No, I rarely forget my keys. Once I locked myself out, so I called my landlord and he let me back into the flat after about 20 minutes.
Do you think it's a good idea to leave your keys with a neighbour?
Score: 55.0Suggestion: Answer directly and give two concise reasons with linking words (e.g., "because", "so"). Use correct plural/singular forms and more precise vocabulary (e.g., "valuable items" or "possessions"). Avoid repetition.
Example: No, I wouldn't. I think it is risky because a neighbour could enter my home when I'm away and important possessions might be stolen, so I prefer a secure alternative like a lockbox.
× No, I seldom breed a lot of kids with you with me because I think, uh, I am a easy forecast person.
✓ No, I seldom bring a lot of keys with me because I think I am an easygoing person.
The student used 'breed' and 'kids' incorrectly instead of 'bring' and 'keys' (word choice). 'A easy forecast person' is ungrammatical; correct form is 'an easygoing person' and 'an' before a vowel sound. This fits present-tense description, so use simple present. Suggestion: learn common collocations (bring keys, easygoing) and article use before vowel sounds. Note: this correction addresses verb choice and adjective/article errors; classified under present tense/verb form issues.
× If I miss my my key, I will lose a lot of keys, then it would be a trouble.
✓ If I lose my key, I will have a lot of trouble.
Mixes tenses and articles. Use simple present 'lose' in the if-clause with 'will' in the main clause for a first conditional. 'A lot of keys' is illogical given context; 'a lot of trouble' or 'many problems' fits. 'a trouble' is incorrect; 'trouble' is uncountable. Suggestion: use correct conditional structure and uncountable nouns (trouble).
× No I have never lose my keys but I have I had a experience is was that I forgot where the key I place placed but but after well fortunately I find it.
✓ No, I have never lost my keys, but once I had an experience where I forgot where I had placed a key; fortunately I found it afterwards.
Use present perfect 'have never lost' (past participle 'lost' required). 'I have I had a experience is was' contains tense confusion and articles; use 'once I had an experience' or 'once I forgot'. 'Placed' is past participle; 'I had placed' shows past perfect to show earlier action. 'I find it' should be past 'I found it' because the event is in the past. Suggestion: practice past participle forms and sequence of tenses (past perfect for earlier past actions, simple past for later past actions).
× MMM no but I had an experience that forgot the key and locked myself out in the resolution is was that I called my landlord and helped her help to help me assist me to.
✓ No, but I once forgot my key and locked myself out; I called my landlord and she helped me.
Original has awkward fragments and tense/forms. Use simple past 'forgot' and 'locked' for completed past events. 'The resolution is was that' is redundant and incorrect; simplify to 'I called my landlord and she helped me.' Remove extra verbs 'help to help me assist me to.' Suggestion: keep past-tense narration concise and avoid repeating verbs; use subject pronoun 'she' for landlord if female, or 'they' otherwise.
× No, I think it is dangerous because if they have if my neighbors has my house key, they will go, they will come in my house when I in when I am not staying in my house then I will lose some valuable.
✓ No, I think it is dangerous because if my neighbours have my house key, they could enter my house when I am not there and I could lose valuables.
Subject-verb agreement: 'neighbours have' (plural subject takes 'have', not 'has'). Remove redundant 'they have if'. Use 'could' to express possibility. 'Come in my house' -> 'enter my house' or 'come into my house'. 'When I am not staying in my house' -> 'when I am not there'. 'Lose some valuable' incorrect; use plural 'valuables'. Suggestion: check subject-verb agreement with plural nouns, use modal verbs for possibility, and use correct plural nouns for countable items.