Part 1
考官
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
考生
Yes, I have a bike. It's in red color and I love it very much.
考官
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
考生
Yes of course in Pakistan bikes are very popular and it's take less space to move and easily park anywhere. It move easily from rush areas.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
分數: 58.0建議: Use past tense consistently, give a clear topic sentence, add one specific detail and a brief reason or memory. Keep it concise (1–4 sentences) and natural. For example, say when you had it and why you liked it.
範例: Yes, I had a red bicycle when I was a child. I got it for my eighth birthday and loved it because it let me explore my neighborhood independently. I especially remember riding to the park with friends every afternoon.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
分數: 64.0建議: Begin with a clear topic sentence, use correct grammar and linking words, and add one specific reason or example. Avoid repetition and keep sentences varied and natural.
範例: Yes, motorcycles and scooters are very popular in Pakistan. Because they are compact, they take up less space, are cheaper to run than cars, and can weave through traffic, many commuters prefer them for daily travel.
× Yes, I have a bike.
✓ Yes, I had a bike.
The examiner asked about the past ('when you were a child'), so the student should use the past tense. Using 'have' (present) is mismatched with the time reference. Use 'had' to match the past context. Suggestion: Pay attention to time expressions (e.g., when you were a child) and use past tense verbs such as 'had'.
× It's in red color and I love it very much.
✓ It was red, and I loved it very much.
Continuing the past context, the description should use past tense ('was' not 'is') and a natural adjective phrase; English typically uses 'red' rather than 'in red color'. Also change 'love' to 'loved' to match past tense. Use simple adjective after verb 'be' (was red). Suggestion: Use 'was red' or 'was a red bike' for past descriptions and match verb tense for feelings: 'I loved it.'.
× Yes of course in Pakistan bikes are very popular and it's take less space to move and easily park anywhere.
✓ Yes, of course. In Pakistan, bikes are very popular because they take up less space to move and are easy to park anywhere.
Multiple issues: missing commas, run-on sentence, incorrect contraction 'it's' with incorrect verb form 'take', and awkward phrasing. 'It's take' is wrong because 'it is take' is ungrammatical; the plural subject 'bikes' needs plural verb 'take' or rephrase with 'they take up less space'. Also use 'take up less space' and 'are easy to park' for correct adjective/adverb forms. Suggestion: Break ideas into clearer clauses, ensure subject-verb agreement, and use idiomatic expressions: 'they take up less space' and 'are easy to park.'.
× It move easily from rush areas.
✓ They moved easily through crowded areas.
Context requires past tense and plural subject agreement: 'bikes' is plural so use 'they moved.' Also 'rush areas' is unnatural; use 'crowded areas' and the preposition 'through' rather than 'from'. Match tense with earlier past narration. Suggestion: Ensure subject and verb agree in number and tense, and choose natural collocations: 'move through crowded areas' or in past: 'moved through crowded areas.'