Sample report / Natural English

What the Would a native speaker combine these words? report could reveal

This is a synthetic learner report generated from the same prompt bank, scoring, interpretation, lesson, and recommendation builders used by the live diagnostic.

Sample score

63%

B1

sample level

9

review points

Collocation profile

Natural word pairs: understandable but translated

understandable but translated

Listening is making the English sound less native-like than the grammar score alone suggests. The fix is phrase memory: learn the better option as a chunk.

Naturalness

63%

Scores whether the phrasing fits real context, not only whether the sentence is possible.

Risk signal

Listening

0% is the first phrase habit to clean up.

Strongest support

Pronunciation

100% is keeping the English usable.

Next proof

Retake collocation prompts and reuse every missed phrase in a new sentence.

Important caveat

Naturalness is context-sensitive. Treat the score as a phrase-risk map, not a native-speaker certificate.

Report story

B1, close to B2

Your strongest signals are pronunciation and business english. The fastest improvement path is cleaning up listening and real life, then retesting in a focused diagnostic.

Already working

Pronunciation clarity is not the main thing blocking communication.

Workplace English is already useful for common internal situations.

Holding back the result

Listening speed is likely to break down in real conversations.

Real-life situations need more automatic survival phrases.

The meaning is clear, but some choices still sound translated.

Fastest visible win: Native-like phrasing: Save the correct answers as ready-made chunks and reuse them out loud.

Lesson brief

Listening is the first repair target

These are not random mistakes. The report found reusable lesson targets in listening, naturalness and real life. Fix these first, then retake a focused diagnostic instead of jumping into another mixed quiz.

Listening

Catch the real spoken signal

Collocation check: Listen to the speaker. What is implied?

Better: The speaker is politely saying the decision probably needs to change.

Open lesson

Naturalness

Stop sounding translated

Collocation check: Can you make a photo of us?

Better: Unnatural

Open lesson

Real life

Turn the answer into a survival script

Collocation check: Buy medicine that does not make you sleepy with $12 using a train-station kiosk.

Better: Non-drowsy cold medicine and water.

Open lesson

Pattern diagnosis

The repeated signals the report would group

Naturalness

Native-like phrasing

watch

4 of 9 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 56%.

Collocation check: Can you make a photo of us?

Next move: Save the correct answers as ready-made chunks and reuse them out loud.

Real life

Survival control

watch

2 of 4 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 51%.

Collocation check: Buy medicine that does not make you sleepy with $12 using a train-station kiosk.

Next move: Memorize the corrected sentence as a practical script, not a grammar rule.

Vocabulary

Word choice

minor

2 of 7 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 71%.

Collocation check: The flight was delayed because of ___ rain.

Next move: Review missed words as phrases, not isolated translations.

Listening

Listening tolerance

sharp

1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 0%.

Collocation check: Listen to the speaker. What is implied?

Next move: Replay missed audio twice: once for meaning, once for exact reduced words.

Pronunciation

Sound clarity

minor

This area held up across 1 reviewed prompt. Average signal: 100%.

Collocation check: Did you hear ship or sheep?

Next move: Practice the exact minimal pairs or read-aloud lines from missed prompts.

Question-by-question preview

The report is more than a score

1. Real life / B2

0%

Collocation check: Buy medicine that does not make you sleepy with $12 using a train-station kiosk.

Sample answer: A magazine, headphones, and perfume.

Better: Non-drowsy cold medicine and water.

Pattern: Short, diagnostic, and reusable across tests, funnels, and practice loops.

2. Listening / B2

0%

Collocation check: Listen to the speaker. What is implied?

Sample answer: The speaker fully agrees and wants to continue immediately.

Better: The speaker is politely saying the decision probably needs to change.

Pattern: Short, diagnostic, and reusable across tests, funnels, and practice loops.

3. Real life / B2

27%

Collocation check: You need to reschedule an appointment. Say what you need in 1-2 sentences.

Sample answer: It is about please and could.

Better: A strong answer should include: please, could, today, tomorrow, update.

Pattern: Short, diagnostic, and reusable across tests, funnels, and practice loops.

4. Naturalness / A2

0%

Collocation check: Can you make a photo of us?

Sample answer: Natural

Better: Unnatural

Pattern: A tiny collocation can make clear English sound translated.

5. Vocabulary / A2

0%

Collocation check: The flight was delayed because of ___ rain.

Sample answer: strong

Better: heavy

Pattern: This is a fast naturalness check: not grammar, just whether the phrase lands.

6. Vocabulary / A2

0%

Collocation check: I need a cup of ___ coffee before the meeting.

Sample answer: heavy

Better: strong

Pattern: A quick everyday phrase that feels small until it is wrong.

7. Naturalness / A2

0%

Collocation check: You are tired during a long study session. What would you say?

Sample answer: Let's make a break.

Better: Let's take a break.

Pattern: A phrase this common should feel automatic, not assembled word by word.