Part 1
Examiner
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidate
Yes, I did have a bike when I was child. Uh, it was a bias. It was a bike in red and my parents bought for me and my sister and we also write.
Examiner
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidate
Yes, I see the bikes in my country where becomes the popular because people who don't like ride a car, we choose the right bicycle bike and it's help to.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Score: 52.0Suggestion: Используйте правильную грамматику и произношение, говорите связно и логично. Исправьте ошибки в формах слов (напр., «when I was a child»), в произношении («bike» не «bias») и в выборе глаголов (например, «we also rode»). Дайте одно четкое предложение-ответ, затем 1–2 поддерживающих предложения с подробностью (цвет, кто подарил, как часто использовали). Используйте связки («and», «because», «so») чтобы улучшить плавность.
Example: Yes, I had a bike when I was a child. It was a red bicycle that my parents bought for my sister and me, and we rode it around the neighborhood every afternoon. I remember practicing until I could ride without help, which made me feel very proud.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Score: 48.0Suggestion: Упростите и структурируйте ответ: начните с прямого утверждения, затем добавьте причины и пример. Исправьте грамматику и порядок слов (например, «bikes are becoming popular», «people who don’t like to drive»). Избегайте повторов («bicycle bike») и завершайте мысль полностью — объясните, чем именно это помогает (экономия, здоровье, трафик). Используйте связки («because», «so», «for example»).
Example: Yes, bikes are becoming more popular in my country. This is because many people prefer them to cars for short trips — they are cheaper and help avoid traffic. For example, I often see commuters cycling to work in the mornings to save time and money.
× Yes, I did have a bike when I was child.
✓ Yes, I did have a bike when I was a child.
The noun 'child' needs the article 'a' to be grammatically correct in this context when referring to a single, nonspecific time in the past. Use 'a child' to indicate the speaker's age period. Suggestion: always include the article before singular countable nouns when speaking about a general period of life.
× Uh, it was a bias.
✓ Uh, it was a bike.
The word 'bias' is a wrong word choice; likely a pronunciation error. Replace with the correct noun 'bike'. No article change needed because 'it' already refers to the previously mentioned bike. Suggestion: pronounce 'bike' clearly and use the correct lexical item.
× It was a bike in red and my parents bought for me and my sister and we also write.
✓ It was a red bike that my parents bought for my sister and me, and we also used to ride it.
Multiple issues: adjective order and adjective form ('in red' is awkward; use 'red bike'). Pronoun order and case: use 'my sister and me' as objects. Verb choice and tense: 'bought for me and my sister' should be 'bought for my sister and me', and 'we also write' is incorrect verb choice and present tense; the past habit should be 'we used to ride it'. Suggestion: use adjective directly before noun, proper object pronoun order, and correct past habitual expression 'used to'.
× Yes, I see the bikes in my country where becomes the popular because people who don't like ride a car, we choose the right bicycle bike and it's help to.
✓ Yes, I see many bikes in my country; they have become popular because people who don't like to drive a car choose to ride bicycles, and they help a lot.
Several tense and structure issues: 'where becomes the popular' is ungrammatical—use 'they have become popular' for a present result of a past change. Quantifier: add 'many'. Infinitive and verb forms: 'don't like ride a car' should be 'don't like to drive a car'. Redundant words 'bicycle bike' removed and corrected to 'bicycles'. 'It's help to' is incorrect; use 'they help a lot' or 'they are helpful'. Suggestion: use correct verb forms (infinitive after 'like'), ensure subject-verb agreement, and use plural nouns when speaking generally.