Part 1
考官
Do you like to keep things tidy?
考生
Yes, I like being tidy and I tend to keep my belongings in order and furthermore my friends say that I'm a tight person and also my parents say it too.
考官
Did you use to keep your room tidy as a child?
考生
Yes, definitely. I used to keep my room tidy when I was a child. My parents even now say that I was a tidy and need child. Even today I keep my working room tidy.
Do you like to keep things tidy?
分数: 65.0建议: Cevap doğal ama tekrara ve dilbilgisi hatalarına dikkat etmelisiniz. Konuyu doğrudan belirtin, gereksiz tekrarları çıkarın ve bağlaçları daha uygun kullanın. Örneğin ‘and furthermore’ yerine daha doğal ifadeler (e.g. ‘also’, ‘in fact’) kullanın; ‘a tight person’ ifadesi bağlama uygun değil—‘a tidy person’ ya da ‘very organized’ tercih edin. Cümle sayısını 3–4’te tutun ve destekleyici detayları kısa bir örnekle somutlaştırın.
示例: Yes, I like to keep things tidy. I usually organize my belongings by category and put things back after using them, so my room and desk stay neat. In fact, my friends and parents often comment on how organized I am.
Did you use to keep your room tidy as a child?
分数: 60.0建议: Cevap doğru ama tekrarlı ve birkaç dilbilgisi hatası var. ‘Need child’ yanlış; muhtemelen ‘neat child’ demek istediniz. Tekrardan kaçının ve geçmiş alışkanlığı anlatırken daha doğal bağlaçlar kullanın. Ayrıca geçmişteki alışkanlığınızı küçük bir örnekle destekleyin (ör. oyuncakları nasıl düzenlediğiniz). Cümle uzunluğunu 2–4 arasında tutun.
示例: Yes, I definitely did. I used to keep my room very tidy as a child; for example, I always put my toys in boxes and lined up my books on the shelf. Even now I try to keep my home office neat.
× my friends say that I'm a tight person and also my parents say it too.
✓ My friends say that I'm a tidy person, and my parents say that too.
'Tight' is the wrong adjective in this context; it commonly means stingy or close-fitting. The intended meaning is 'tidy'. Also streamline redundancy: 'and also' plus 'too' is repetitive. Use 'and' and 'too' or just 'and my parents say that too.' Use commas to separate clauses for clarity.
× My parents even now say that I was a tidy and need child.
✓ My parents still say that I was a tidy and neat child.
There are two problems: 'even now' is acceptable but 'still' is more natural in this context. 'need' is a misspelling of 'neat'. Also keep parallel adjectives: 'a tidy and neat child' is redundant but grammatically correct; you can use one adjective ('a tidy child') for conciseness. The tense 'was' is correct when referring to childhood.
× Yes, I like being tidy and I tend to keep my belongings in order and furthermore my friends say that I'm a tight person and also my parents say it too.
✓ Yes, I like being tidy and tend to keep my belongings in order. Furthermore, my friends and my parents both say the same.
The original sentence is a run-on with repeated conjunctions ('and', 'furthermore', 'and also') causing awkwardness. Break into two sentences for clarity and remove redundancy. Use 'both' to indicate two sources succinctly.
× Even today I keep my working room tidy.
✓ Even today, I keep my study/working room tidy.
The sentence is mostly correct but needs a comma after 'Even today' for natural rhythm. Also 'working room' is uncommon; 'study' or 'workspace' is more natural. The present tense 'keep' correctly describes a habitual action.
× Yes, definitely. I used to keep my room tidy when I was a child.
✓ Yes, definitely. I used to keep my room tidy when I was a child.
This sentence is correct. 'Used to' appropriately describes a past habitual action. No change needed.