Part 1
Examinador
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidato
Yes, I have a bike when I was a child.
Examinador
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidato
Uh, I don't think so. Umm, it's not that much popular. We use cars, uh, standoff, uh, bikes, not like uh, for example, India, they use the bikes uh, to go everywhere from home to work and something like that.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Puntuación: 45.0Sugerencia: صحح الأخطاء النحوية واستخدم زمنًا مناسبًا مع جملة موضوع واضحة. اجعل الإجابة مختصرة وطبيعية (جملة موضوع + جملة دعم إن لزم). انتبه إلى استخدام الماضي البسيط للأفعال عندما تتحدث عن الماضي، وتجنب تكرار كلمات غير ضرورية مثل "uh" و"umm".
Ejemplo: Yes, I had a bike when I was a child. It was a small blue bicycle with training wheels, and I rode it around my neighborhood every weekend.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Puntuación: 40.0Sugerencia: نقّح الإجابة لتكون أكثر تنظيماً وواضحة مع استخدام كلمات ربط منطقية. قدّم رأياً واضحاً ثم سبباً محدداً مع مثال موجز. تجنّب التردد والكلمات المكررة وصحّح التعبيرات الغامضة مثل "standoff".
Ejemplo: I don't think bicycles are very popular in my country. Most people prefer cars because distances are long and public transport is limited, unlike in India where many people use bikes to commute to work.
× Yes, I have a bike when I was a child.
✓ Yes, I had a bike when I was a child.
The student used the present tense 'have' with a past time reference 'when I was a child'. This is a tense mismatch. Use the simple past 'had' to describe possession in the past. Suggestion: match past time markers (when I was a child) with past tense verbs (had). Grammar problem type ID:6
× Uh, I don't think so. Umm, it's not that much popular.
✓ Uh, I don't think so. Umm, it's not that popular.
The phrase 'not that much popular' is ungrammatical in English. 'Popular' is an adjective and is modified by 'that' (not that popular) or by 'much' with a comparative structure (not very popular). Suggestion: use 'not that popular' or 'not very popular' to improve naturalness. Grammar problem type ID:6
× We use cars, uh, standoff, uh, bikes, not like uh, for example, India, they use the bikes uh, to go everywhere from home to work and something like that.
✓ We use cars more than bikes. For example, in India they use bikes to go everywhere, from home to work.
Sentence has several problems: unclear phrase 'standoff', redundant pronoun 'they' after 'India' (country names typically don't take a separate pronoun in this context), and awkward word order. Main grammatical issue is incorrect pronoun/reference and sentence structure. Correct by simplifying: compare usage ('more than'), remove extra pronoun or integrate it properly ('in India people use bikes...'), and remove filler. Suggestion: say 'We use cars more than bikes' and 'For example, in India people use bikes to go everywhere, from home to work.' Grammar problem type ID:12