Describe a website you use often.
Your Spoken Response
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AI-Powered Comparison
Your Original Answer
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Criteria Breakdown
Fluency & Coherence
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Micro-Analysis
Lexical Resource
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Micro-Analysis
Grammar & Accuracy
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Micro-Analysis
Pronunciation
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Micro-Analysis
Areas of Improvement
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The One-Minute Power Plan
That one minute of preparation time is your key to success. Don't write full sentences. Instead, use this simple keyword strategy to create a map for your talk. This plan ensures you always have something to say.
Intro (Who/What/When)
Keywords: My friend, Alex... university library... last year...
Description (Details)
Keywords: Tall building, quiet, thousands of books, helpful librarian...
Opinion/Feeling
Keywords: Felt inspired, peaceful, a bit overwhelmed, happy...
Future (Closing)
Keywords: Hope to visit again, recommend to others, study there...
With just a few keywords like this, you have a clear structure to talk for two full minutes without getting lost.
Don't Just Answer—Tell a Story
The bullet points on the cue card are your ingredients, not the recipe. Your goal is to mix them into a smooth, flowing story. Avoid answering them like a checklist. Weave them into a natural narrative.
The Checklist Approach
This answers the points but sounds robotic and repetitive. It lacks flow."The website is Wikipedia. I use it often. I use it to find information for my studies. It is useful because it has many articles. This is a website I use often."
The Storytelling Approach
This flows like a natural conversation and links the ideas together smoothly."Well, one of the websites I find myself using almost daily is Wikipedia. I mainly use it for my university studies, especially when I'm starting a new project. For instance, just last week... It's incredibly useful because of the sheer volume of information it has on almost any topic you can imagine..."
Navigating the Cue Card: Your Questions Answered
Don't panic! The examiner will simply move on to Part 3. It's not an automatic failure. However, speaking for less than about 90 seconds might mean you haven't provided enough language for the examiner to give you a high score. The "Power Plan" method above is the best way to make sure you have enough to talk about for the full time.
You should try to, as they are designed to help you structure your talk. However, the most important task is to talk about the main topic on the card. If you speak fluently for two minutes and develop the main topic well, but miss one minor bullet point, it's much better than awkwardly rushing to mention every point and finishing in 45 seconds.
This happens, and it's okay! The examiner is testing your English, not your life story. If you can't think of a real experience, invent a simple, believable one. You can also talk about a friend's experience or a story you saw in a movie, and adapt it. For example, "I haven't personally experienced this, but my best friend recently told me about..." This is a great strategy.
No, please don't! The AI version is a learning guide, not a script. Use it to learn *how* you could have structured a sentence differently or what better vocabulary you could have used. The goal is to absorb these ideas so your *own* natural speaking improves over time. Memorizing sounds unnatural and will likely lower your fluency score in the real test.