Grammar
Clean the sentence frame
Grammar lens: She explained me the rule.
Better: Unnatural
Open lessonSample report / Grammar
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
64%
B1
sample level
13
review points
Grammar map
Pronunciation is the first visible grammar drag. The fastest improvement is not more random grammar; it is isolating the repeated pattern and making the sentence frame automatic.
Control score
64%
Weighted by difficulty, sentence pattern, and whether the answer needed recall or recognition.
Weakest pattern
Pronunciation
0% is the pattern to isolate first.
Best support
Listening
100% is helping the result stay readable.
Next proof
Retake the weakest grammar category and explain every miss in one sentence.
Important caveat
This is a practical grammar diagnostic, not a school grammar exam.
Report story
Your strongest signals are listening and vocabulary. The fastest improvement path is cleaning up pronunciation and business english, then retesting in a focused diagnostic.
Already working
Listening is strong enough to catch the main message in practical contexts.
Vocabulary range is giving the profile more flexibility than basic survival English.
Exam-style structure is becoming visible in the answers.
Holding back the result
Pronunciation is likely reducing perceived fluency more than vocabulary does.
Business contexts still expose wording, tone, and confidence gaps.
Grammar works in familiar sentences, but small patterns still leak points.
Fastest visible win: Grammar control: Do a focused grammar test, then explain each missed rule in one sentence.
Lesson brief
These are not random mistakes. The report found reusable lesson targets in grammar, naturalness and pronunciation. Fix these first, then retake a focused diagnostic instead of jumping into another mixed quiz.
Grammar
Grammar lens: She explained me the rule.
Better: Unnatural
Open lessonNaturalness
Grammar lens: I am looking forward to meet you.
Better: Unnatural
Open lessonPronunciation
Grammar lens: Did you hear ship or sheep?
Better: ship
Open lessonPattern diagnosis
Grammar
8 of 21 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 62%.
Grammar lens: She explained me the rule.
Next move: Do a focused grammar test, then explain each missed rule in one sentence.
Real life
2 of 6 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 68%.
Grammar lens: Find these objects in pharmacy shelf: stapler, invoice, charging cable.
Next move: Memorize the corrected sentence as a practical script, not a grammar rule.
Pronunciation
1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 0%.
Grammar lens: Did you hear ship or sheep?
Next move: Practice the exact minimal pairs or read-aloud lines from missed prompts.
Business English
1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 25%.
Grammar lens: A teammate missed a deadline and you need the file today. Write a 2-3 sentence reply.
Next move: Add one reason and one concrete detail. Short answers usually understate your real level.
Naturalness
1 of 3 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 67%.
Grammar lens: I am looking forward to meet you.
Next move: Save the correct answers as ready-made chunks and reuse them out loud.
Question-by-question preview
1. Real life / B2
33%Sample answer: stapler
Better: stapler, invoice, charging cable
Pattern: Visual search makes vocabulary feel like a game.
2. Pronunciation / A1
0%Sample answer: sheep
Better: ship
Pattern: Short, diagnostic, and reusable across tests, funnels, and practice loops.
3. Business English / C1
25%Sample answer: I cannot do it now. Maybe later.
Better: A strong answer should include: please, could, today, tomorrow, update.
Pattern: Workplace stakes make the feedback feel immediately useful.
4. Grammar / B1
0%Sample answer: Natural
Better: Unnatural
Pattern: This is a classic confident-B1 mistake. Use it as a practical signal for grammar control practice.
5. Grammar / A2
0%Sample answer: a
Better: the
Pattern: Articles feel tiny, but they tell the listener whether you mean any file or the exact file.
6. Grammar / B1
0%Sample answer: I lived here since 2021.
Better: I have lived here since 2021.
Pattern: A classic tense trap that tells you whether your grammar can hold a timeline.
7. Grammar / A2
0%Sample answer: the
Better: a
Pattern: A tiny article can make a normal work sentence sound suddenly more polished.