Part 1
Examinador
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidato
No, I did not have a bike when I was a child because I don't like, I, I don't like to, uh, ride on a bike. Uh, when I was a child, I prefer to walk with my friend uh, and enjoy my uh, working on the way of school.
Examinador
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidato
Yes, bikes are popular in our country because umm I belong to Pakistan uh in Pakistan bikes are very popular uh in our country uh, it's a very useful and affordable uh right.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Pontuação: 58.0Sugestão: Be more concise and fluent. Start with a clear topic sentence, avoid fillers and repetition, use past tense consistently, and add one or two specific supporting details with linking words. Keep it under five sentences.
Exemplo: No, I didn’t have a bike as a child because I didn’t enjoy cycling. Instead, I usually walked to school with my friends, which gave us time to chat and enjoy the scenery. Because walking was free and social, it suited me better than riding a bike.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Pontuação: 64.0Sugestão: Give a clear reasoned answer with specific details and linking words. Avoid repetition and fillers, use precise vocabulary (e.g., affordable, convenient, common for commuting), and provide an example or brief explanation to support your point.
Exemplo: Yes, bikes are very popular in Pakistan because they are affordable and convenient for short-distance travel. For example, many people use motorcycles or scooters to commute to work or run errands, especially in crowded cities where parking and traffic are difficult.
× No, I did not have a bike when I was a child because I don't like, I, I don't like to, uh, ride on a bike.
✓ No, I did not have a bike when I was a child because I didn't like to ride a bike.
The sentence mixes past and present tense: 'did not have' is past, but 'don't like' is present. For consistency with 'when I was a child' use past tense 'didn't like'. Also remove filler words and redundant phrasing. Suggestion: use 'didn't like to ride a bike.'
× Uh, when I was a child, I prefer to walk with my friend uh, and enjoy my uh, working on the way of school.
✓ When I was a child, I preferred to walk with my friends and enjoy walking on the way to school.
The clause refers to past habitual action so 'prefer' should be past 'preferred'. 'Friend' should be plural if referring generally to companions: 'friends'. 'Working' is incorrect here; the intended word is 'walking'. Preposition 'on the way of school' is incorrect; use 'on the way to school'. Remove filler words. Use consistent past tense.
× Yes, bikes are popular in our country because umm I belong to Pakistan uh in Pakistan bikes are very popular uh in our country uh, it's a very useful and affordable uh right.
✓ Yes, bikes are popular in my country. I am from Pakistan, and bikes are very common and affordable there.
Use 'my country' not 'our country' for a single speaker. 'I belong to Pakistan' is unnatural; use 'I am from Pakistan'. Avoid repeating 'in Pakistan' and 'in our country'. 'It's a very useful and affordable right' is ungrammatical—replace with 'bikes are very common and affordable there.' Also remove filler words. Ensure pronouns and references are clear and natural.