Corrections – 2 (14-15/03/25)
14/03/2025
Source
Corrected (B2 level): "Not right now. Thank you!"
Not right now, but thank you.
Corrected (C1 level, more natural): "Not at the moment. Thank you!"
Not at the moment, but I really appreciate it.
I’ll pass for now, but thanks anyway.
Thanks, but I’ll wait a bit.
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1. Your question:
"Hi, what is the best and more precise way to check my English current level and knowledge?"
Corrected (B2 level):
"Hi, what is the best and most precise way to check my current English level and knowledge?"
Corrected (C1 level, more natural):
"Hi, what’s the most accurate way to assess my current English level and knowledge?"
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3. Your question:
"What skills will you test? Should I prepare something for a testing?"
Corrected (B2 level):
"What skills will you test? Should I prepare something for the test?"
Corrected (C1 level, more natural):
"What skills will you be testing? Should I prepare anything for the test?"
Mistakes & Explanation:
- "a testing" → "the test"
- "Testing" is uncountable; you can’t say "a testing". You need to say "a test" or "the test".
- "Should I prepare something" → "Should I prepare anything" (C1 level suggestion)
- "Anything" is more common in questions and sounds more natural
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Corrected versions:
✅ B2 level: "Hi, I would like to see more examples."
✅ C1 level (more natural): "Hi, could you give me more examples?"
Explanation of corrections:
- "Would like more examples" → "Would like to see more examples"
- The original sentence is not incorrect, but adding "to see" makes it sound smoother in some contexts.
- Alternatively, "Could you give me more examples?" is more natural in spoken English because it directly asks for them.
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15/03/2025
✅ B2 Level (More Polite & Natural): "Could you please summarize your advice?"
✅ C1 Level (More Conversational & Natural): "Would you mind summarizing your
Polite & Formal Versions:
✔ "Would you be able to summarize your advice?"
✔ "I’d appreciate it if you could summarize your advice."
✔ "Could you kindly summarize your advice for me?"
Neutral & Natural Versions:
✔ "Can you summarize your advice?" (Slightly less formal but still polite)
✔ "Would you mind giving me a quick summary of your advice?"
✔ "Can you give me a brief rundown of your advice?"
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