RoadPart 1 Report

MockPart12025-12-28 06:18:20

Conversation

Part 1

Examiner

Are the roads in the area where you live busy?

Candidate

I live on the main highway of Canadian St. It's I live near the supermarket which due to which the roads are always busy, especially 4 hours in the morning, 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM. However, I always go to my work on time to get rid of the rush.

Examiner

Do people cross the road in the city where you live?

Candidate

Yes, definitely. People often cross the road in my city where I live. However, there is a ghost park for the pedestrian and traffic lights as well. Whenever there is a pedestrian sign on, the individuals use the course walk. I believe that it could it could be a better idea for the pedestrian.

Examiner

How is the condition of the roads in your city?

Candidate

Roads are in perfect condition where I live. However, I used to live in India where roads had bad condition. However, where I live right now, roads were constructed this summer. I faced a lot of distraction. However, the roads are recovered now.

Examiner

Do you think the roads in your city need improvement?

Candidate

As I mentioned earlier that roads near my house are recently constructed. Before they had in they were in bad condition. However, after reconstruction, the roads are smooth and easy to drive.

Evaluation

Overall

Overall: 6.0Fluency & Coherence: 6.0Pronunciation: 6.0Grammar: 6.0Lexical Resource: 6.0

Part 1

Are the roads in the area where you live busy?

Score: 62.0

Suggestion: Be clear and concise: begin with a direct topic sentence, avoid repetition and grammar errors, and give one or two specific supporting details with linking words. Correct tense and article use (e.g., 'the supermarket', 'I live on').

Example: Yes. I live on the main highway, near a busy supermarket, so the roads are usually crowded. For example, traffic is heaviest between 8:00 and 11:00 in the morning, but I leave earlier to avoid the rush.

Do people cross the road in the city where you live?

Score: 50.0

Suggestion: Make sentences natural and accurate: start with a clear answer, then give specific details. Use correct vocabulary (e.g., 'pedestrian crossing' not 'ghost park') and concise linking words ('also', 'for example'). Avoid repeated phrases.

Example: Yes. People often cross the streets using pedestrian crossings and traffic lights. For example, when the pedestrian signal turns green, most people wait and cross safely, which helps reduce accidents.

How is the condition of the roads in your city?

Score: 58.0

Suggestion: Provide a clear topic sentence and coherent timeline. Use linking words to show contrast (e.g., 'but', 'however') correctly and give specific details about repairs and current state. Correct word choice (e.g., 'issues' or 'inconvenience' instead of 'distraction').

Example: The roads in my neighborhood are in excellent condition now. Previously, when I lived in India the roads were poor, but the local roads near my current home were rebuilt this summer, so the surface is smooth and traffic flows well.

Do you think the roads in your city need improvement?

Score: 65.0

Suggestion: Answer directly and briefly, then support with a specific reason or example. Avoid redundant phrases and correct grammar (e.g., 'they were in bad condition'). Consider stating whether other areas still need work.

Example: Not really for my neighborhood, because the roads were recently reconstructed and are now smooth and easy to drive. However, some older parts of the city still need repairs, especially pothole-filled side streets.

Grammar

Sentence structure errors

× I live on the main highway of Canadian St.

I live on Canadian Street, which is a main road.

The original sentence uses an awkward prepositional phrase 'on the main highway of Canadian St.' and mixes 'highway' with 'St.' Rewriting clarifies location and uses the correct noun form 'Street'. Use consistent road terminology and place the modifier correctly.

Incorrect use of conjunction/structure

× It's I live near the supermarket which due to which the roads are always busy, especially 4 hours in the morning, 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM.

I live near a supermarket, which makes the roads busy, especially in the morning from 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM.

The original contains repeated subject 'It's I live', incorrect relative clause 'which due to which', and awkward time expression. Correct by using a single main clause and a relative clause 'which makes the roads busy' and a clear time phrase 'from 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM'. This fixes sentence structure and clarity (type 26).

Tense/verb agreement and word choice (Present tense issue)

× However, I always go to my work on time to get rid of the rush.

However, I always get to work on time to avoid the rush.

'Go to my work' is wordy; 'get to work' is the common idiom. 'Get rid of the rush' is incorrect collocation; use 'avoid the rush'. This corrects verb choice and idiomatic expression while keeping present tense (type 6).

Redundancy and pronoun errors (Sentence structure errors)

× Yes, definitely. People often cross the road in my city where I live.

Yes, definitely. People often cross the road in my city.

'In my city where I live' is redundant. Remove the repeated phrase to make the sentence concise and grammatically correct (type 26).

Incorrect word choice (Incorrect use of nouns)

× However, there is a ghost park for the pedestrian and traffic lights as well.

However, there is a pedestrian crossing and traffic lights as well.

'Ghost park' is incorrect; likely intended 'pedestrian crossing' or 'zebra crossing'. Also use plural 'pedestrians' or the compound noun 'pedestrian crossing'. This fixes incorrect noun choice and clarity (type 26).

Incorrect verb phrase (Verb + -ing form)

× Whenever there is a pedestrian sign on, the individuals use the course walk.

Whenever the pedestrian signal is on, people use the crosswalk.

'Pedestrian sign on' and 'course walk' are incorrect collocations. Use 'pedestrian signal' and 'crosswalk' (or 'crossing'). 'Individuals' is formal and awkward; 'people' is natural. This corrects word choice and noun phrases (type 8).

Sentence structure errors

× I believe that it could it could be a better idea for the pedestrian.

I believe it could be a better idea for pedestrians.

The sentence repeats 'it could' and uses singular 'the pedestrian' awkwardly. Remove the repetition and use plural 'pedestrians' for a general statement. This fixes redundancy and noun number (type 26 and 1).

Article errors

× Roads are in perfect condition where I live.

The roads are in perfect condition where I live.

When speaking about specific roads in your area, use the definite article 'the'. Without it, the sentence sounds general or incomplete. This fixes article usage (type 22).

Tense error (Past tense issue)

× However, I used to live in India where roads had bad condition.

However, I used to live in India where the roads were in poor condition.

Use definite article 'the' with 'roads' and 'were in poor condition' is the correct past-tense phrasing. 'Had bad condition' is ungrammatical; use 'were in poor condition' or 'were in bad condition'. This corrects past tense and article use (type 5 and 22).

Tense consistency and passive/active clarity (Past participle/Passive)

× However, where I live right now, roads were constructed this summer.

However, where I live now, the roads were constructed this summer.

Add 'the' before 'roads' and use 'now' instead of 'right now' for conciseness. The past passive 'were constructed this summer' is acceptable if the construction finished in the past; keep tense consistent. This addresses article use and maintains correct past passive (type 9 and 22).

Word choice and sentence structure errors

× I faced a lot of distraction.

I experienced a lot of disruption.

'Distraction' is the wrong noun; 'disruption' fits road construction context. Also 'experienced' is a more natural verb here. This fixes word choice and clarity (type 26).

Tense/word form (Present perfect or passive)

× However, the roads are recovered now.

However, the roads have recovered now, or The roads have been repaired now.

'Are recovered' is not a natural English phrasing. Use present perfect 'have recovered' if roads themselves improved, or 'have been repaired' if repairs were done. This corrects verb form and tense (type 6 and 9).

Sentence structure and unnecessary word

× As I mentioned earlier that roads near my house are recently constructed.

As I mentioned earlier, the roads near my house were recently constructed.

Remove 'that' after 'mentioned earlier' and use past passive 'were recently constructed' (since construction completed). 'Are recently constructed' is awkward; 'were recently constructed' is correct. This fixes sentence structure and tense (type 26 and 5).

Article and tense errors

× Before they had in they were in bad condition.

Before, they were in bad condition.

The original is garbled ('had in they'). Simplify to 'Before, they were in bad condition.' This fixes sentence structure and past tense (type 26 and 5).

Article usage

× However, after reconstruction, the roads are smooth and easy to drive.

However, after reconstruction, the roads are smooth and easy to drive on.

Add the preposition 'on' after 'drive' to complete the verb phrase 'drive on'. The rest is correct; tense is present because this is the current state. This fixes missing preposition (type 11).

Vocabulary

BadSubstandard; Harmful; Unpleasant; Inauspicious; Severe
BetterSuperior; More advantageous; To a higher standard
BusyOccupied; Unavailable; Hectic
EasyUncomplicated; Docile; Vulnerable; Leisurely
PerfectIdeal; Flawless; Exact; Absolute; Improve
Talkface

Contact us

Got questions? Please reach us at: info@Talkface.ai