Part 1
Examinador
Do you like chatting with friends?
Candidato
Absolutely. I chat with my friend very often and we talk about funny and serious topics. We especially like to talk about politics and analyzing them because the current events are very changing and interesting at the same time.
Examinador
What do you usually chat about with friends?
Candidato
What do you usually, uh, talk about politics because the current events are very interesting and spicy. So it's all about analyzing them and predict the next events and how it will be and what people opinions.
Examinador
Do you prefer to chat with a group of people or with only one friend?
Candidato
I prefer talking with only one friends because I want the idea state focused and not being so distracted with other people if you were talking in a group. So if I was talking in a group I will be just like reading or listening.
Examinador
Do you prefer to communicate face-to-face or via social media?
Candidato
I do prefer, uh, communicate both, uh, social media and face to face, but uh, in my perspective, I prefer face to face in the 1st place because I can transfer my idea very clearly.
Examinador
Do you argue with friends?
Candidato
Not all the time, but sometimes they are having that common friend. We are arguing about such topics because we have a different opinions. So that's happened from time to time, not always.
Do you like chatting with friends?
Pontuação: 72.0Sugestão: Make your response more concise and correct grammar. Start with a clear topic sentence, avoid repetition, and use a linking phrase to add a specific detail. Correct subject-verb agreement and word forms (e.g., "friends", "analyze").
Exemplo: Yes, I do. I chat with my friends regularly about a mix of light and serious subjects; for example, we often analyze current political events because they keep changing and affect our lives.
What do you usually chat about with friends?
Pontuação: 60.0Sugestão: Answer directly and avoid filler words. Use a clear topic sentence, then add specific supporting details with correct verb forms and linking words (e.g., "we analyze", "we try to predict"). Improve coherence by organizing ideas and fixing grammar ("people's opinions").
Exemplo: I usually talk about current politics. For instance, we analyze news developments, compare different viewpoints, and try to predict how events might unfold and how people will react.
Do you prefer to chat with a group of people or with only one friend?
Pontuação: 65.0Sugestão: Give a direct preference statement and support it with clear reasons. Fix grammar (singular/plural, conditionals) and use linking words (because, so) to show cause and effect. Keep answers within 2–3 concise sentences.
Exemplo: I prefer talking with one friend because I can focus on the ideas without distractions. In a group conversation I often end up listening more than contributing.
Do you prefer to communicate face-to-face or via social media?
Pontuação: 70.0Sugestão: State your preference clearly and avoid fillers. Use a short topic sentence and one supporting reason with correct collocations ("prefer face-to-face communication") and smoother phrasing ("first choice/priority").
Exemplo: I prefer face-to-face communication most of all because I can express my ideas more clearly and read body language, though I also use social media when meeting in person isn't possible.
Do you argue with friends?
Pontuação: 64.0Sugestão: Answer directly then provide a concise explanation with correct grammar and vocabulary ("different opinions", "from time to time"). Remove unclear phrases ("they are having that common friend"). Use linking words to clarify frequency and cause.
Exemplo: Not often, but occasionally we argue when our opinions differ on sensitive topics. These disagreements happen from time to time, but they are usually short-lived.
× I chat with my friend very often and we talk about funny and serious topics.
✓ I chat with my friends very often and we talk about funny and serious topics.
The original uses singular 'friend' but refers to 'we' and multiple topics; likely meaning is plural friends. This is a singular/plural issue (subject-verb/ noun number). Use 'friends' to agree with 'we' and the plural context.
× We especially like to talk about politics and analyzing them because the current events are very changing and interesting at the same time.
✓ We especially like to talk about politics and analyze it because current events are changing and interesting at the same time.
Mixed forms: 'like to talk' is fine but 'and analyzing' is wrong structure; use parallel infinitive 'and analyze'. Also 'them' referring to politics/current events is awkward; use 'it' or 'current events'. 'Very changing' is unidiomatic; use 'changing'. This fits verb + -ing/form and adjective usage issues (IDs 8 and 13).
× What do you usually, uh, talk about politics because the current events are very interesting and spicy.
✓ I usually talk about politics because current events are very interesting and spicy.
The sentence fragments and question structure are incorrect. Replace with a complete declarative answer starting with subject 'I' and present simple 'usually talk'. Remove redundant commas and filler. This is a sentence structure and present tense issue (IDs 26 and 6).
× So it's all about analyzing them and predict the next events and how it will be and what people opinions.
✓ So it's all about analyzing them and predicting the next events, how they will be, and what people's opinions are.
Parallel gerunds needed: 'analyzing' and 'predicting'. 'How it will be' should agree in number 'how they will be' referring to events. 'What people opinions' lacks possessive and verb; use 'people's opinions are'. This covers verb -ing form and incorrect use of pronouns/articles (IDs 8, 12, 22).
× I prefer talking with only one friends because I want the idea state focused and not being so distracted with other people if you were talking in a group.
✓ I prefer talking with only one friend because I want my ideas to stay focused and not be so distracted by other people if I am talking in a group.
Use singular 'friend' to match 'one'. 'The idea state focused' is ungrammatical; use 'my ideas to stay focused'. 'Not being so distracted' should be 'not be so distracted'. Also tense/person consistency: change 'if you were talking' to 'if I am talking' to match perspective. Issues: singular/plural, sentence structure, verb form and pronoun consistency (IDs 1, 26, 12).
× So if I was talking in a group I will be just like reading or listening.
✓ So if I am talking in a group, I will just be reading or listening.
Use consistent real conditional: 'if I am... I will...' or for hypothetical 'if I were... I would...'. Original mixed past 'was' with 'will'. Also word order 'will be just like reading' is informal; use 'will just be reading'. This is a tense/conditional and auxiliary verb issue (IDs 7 and 4).
× I do prefer, uh, communicate both, uh, social media and face to face, but uh, in my perspective, I prefer face to face in the 1st place because I can transfer my idea very clearly.
✓ I prefer to communicate via both social media and face to face, but in my view, I prefer face to face in the first place because I can convey my ideas very clearly.
Use 'prefer to communicate' (infinitive) and 'via' for medium. 'Communicate both, social media and face to face' is ungrammatical; reorder to 'via both social media and face to face'. 'In my perspective' is better as 'in my view'. 'Transfer my idea' is unnatural; use 'convey my ideas'. Correct article/number and infinitive usage (IDs 8, 11, 22).
× Not all the time, but sometimes they are having that common friend.
✓ Not all the time, but sometimes we have that common friend.
'They are having' is incorrect in this context; use simple present 'we have'. Also pronoun 'they' doesn't match context—student speaking about arguments among friends, so 'we' is appropriate. This addresses incorrect use of pronouns and verb tense (IDs 12 and 6).
× We are arguing about such topics because we have a different opinions.
✓ We argue about such topics because we have different opinions.
Use simple present 'we argue' for habitual action. 'A different opinions' mixes singular article with plural noun; use 'different opinions' without 'a'. This covers article errors and subject-verb tense choice (IDs 22 and 6).
× So that's happened from time to time, not always.
✓ So that happens from time to time, not always.
Use present simple 'happens' for habitual occurrences. 'That's happened' (present perfect) is not appropriate for the general habitual meaning. This is a tense and sentence structure issue (IDs 5 and 26).