Part 1
Examinador
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidato
Yes, I had a back when I was when I was a child. I really like it and my father taught me how to ride a bike. It took me such a long time to learn how to ride, but once I ride my back, I can go everywhere I want.
Examinador
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidato
It used to be very popular in my country, but recently there are more cars in our country so I cannot see any bikes in the place I live.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Pontuação: 62.0Sugestão: 発音と語彙選択の誤り("back"→"bike")、文の繰り返し("when I was" が重複)、時制の一貫性、語順や自然な表現の改善が必要です。回答は短く明確なトピック文の後、具体的な補足を1〜2文で述べると良いです。また、接続語(e.g. "because", "so", "after that")を使って論理を明確にしましょう。例えば時制は過去の経験については過去形で統一し、流暢さを上げるために簡潔にまとめてください。
Exemplo: Yes, I had a bike when I was a child. My father taught me how to ride it, and although it took me a long time to learn, I eventually became confident. After that, I could go anywhere in my neighborhood on my bike.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Pontuação: 68.0Sugestão: 内容は伝わりますが、単数・複数や語順("popular"の対象や時の表現)をより自然にし、理由や具体例を加えると説得力が増します。接続詞("however", "because", "nowadays")を適切に使い、比較を示す語句("less common than before")を入れてください。可能であれば、具体的な場所や統計的な印象を短く付け加えると良いです。
Exemplo: Bicycles used to be very popular in my country, but nowadays cars are much more common. Because more people can afford cars, I see far fewer bikes on the streets near my home.
× Yes, I had a back when I was when I was a child.
✓ Yes, I had a bike when I was a child.
The student used 'back' instead of 'bike', which is a vocabulary error rather than grammar, and repeated 'when I was'. The verb 'had' correctly uses past tense for a past possession, but the sentence needs correction for the correct noun and to remove repetition. Suggestion: use 'bike' and say 'when I was a child' once to make the sentence concise.
× I really like it and my father taught me how to ride a bike.
✓ I really liked it and my father taught me how to ride a bike.
The student mixes present 'I really like it' with past 'my father taught me'. Because both events refer to childhood, past tense should be used consistently: 'liked' and 'taught'. Suggestion: keep past tense for past experiences.
× It took me such a long time to learn how to ride, but once I ride my back, I can go everywhere I want.
✓ It took me a long time to learn how to ride, but once I rode my bike, I could go everywhere I wanted.
Main clause 'It took me' is past, so subordinate clauses should also be past: use 'rode' (past) instead of 'ride' and 'could'/'wanted' instead of present 'can'/'want'. Also 'back' should be 'bike'. Suggestion: keep consistent past tense when describing past events and correct the noun.
× It used to be very popular in my country, but recently there are more cars in our country so I cannot see any bikes in the place I live.
✓ Bicycles used to be very popular in my country, but recently there are more cars, so I cannot see many bikes where I live.
'It used to be' is unclear; use 'Bicycles used to be' to specify the subject. 'Recently there are more cars in our country' is grammatical but wordy; simplify to 'recently there are more cars'. 'I cannot see any bikes' is too strong if some bikes remain; use 'many bikes' or 'as many bikes'. 'the place I live' is awkward; use 'where I live'. Tense usage is acceptable ('used to' for past state, 'recently there are' for present trend). Suggestion: name the subject and improve collocation and phrasing for natural speech.