Listening
Catch the real spoken signal
Modern English: In a casual explanation, what does the speaker say?
Better: I do not know what happened.
Open lessonSample report / Natural English
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
65%
B1
sample level
9
review points
Modern English profile
Business English 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
65%
Scores whether the phrasing fits real context, not only whether the sentence is possible.
Risk signal
Business English
25% is the first phrase habit to clean up.
Strongest support
Vocabulary
100% is keeping the English usable.
Next proof
Redo slang prompts and rewrite risky expressions into safe everyday English.
Important caveat
Naturalness is context-sensitive. Treat the score as a phrase-risk map, not a native-speaker certificate.
Report story
Your strongest signals are vocabulary and naturalness. The fastest improvement path is cleaning up business english and real life, then retesting in a focused diagnostic.
Already working
Vocabulary range is giving the profile more flexibility than basic survival English.
Natural phrasing is making the English sound less translated.
Holding back the result
Business contexts still expose wording, tone, and confidence gaps.
Real-life situations need more automatic survival phrases.
Listening catches the gist, but speed and reductions still create misses.
Fastest visible win: Listening tolerance: Replay missed audio twice: once for meaning, once for exact reduced words.
Lesson brief
These are not random mistakes. The report found reusable lesson targets in listening, naturalness and business english. Fix these first, then retake a focused diagnostic instead of jumping into another mixed quiz.
Listening
Modern English: In a casual explanation, what does the speaker say?
Better: I do not know what happened.
Open lessonNaturalness
Modern English: Friend: You said you were on your way. Ten minutes later: 'Sure.'
Better: annoyed
Open lessonBusiness English
Modern English: A teammate missed a deadline and you need the file today. Write a 2-3 sentence reply.
Better: A strong answer should include: please, could, today, tomorrow, update.
Open lessonPattern diagnosis
Listening
5 of 12 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 58%.
Modern English: In a casual explanation, what does the speaker say?
Next move: Replay missed audio twice: once for meaning, once for exact reduced words.
Real life
2 of 3 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 46%.
Modern English: Find these objects in pharmacy shelf: stapler, invoice, charging cable.
Next move: Memorize the corrected sentence as a practical script, not a grammar rule.
Business English
1 of 1 reviewed prompt exposed this pattern. Average signal: 25%.
Modern English: 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 7 reviewed prompts exposed this pattern. Average signal: 86%.
Modern English: Friend: You said you were on your way. Ten minutes later: 'Sure.'
Next move: Save the correct answers as ready-made chunks and reuse them out loud.
Vocabulary
This area held up across 1 reviewed prompt. Average signal: 100%.
Modern English: Which phrase sounds natural in everyday English?
Next move: Review missed words as phrases, not isolated translations.
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. Real life / B1
27%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.
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. Listening / A2
0%Sample answer: I do know what happened.
Better: I do not know what happened.
Pattern: This one feels tiny, but it unlocks a lot of casual conversation.
5. Naturalness / B1
0%Sample answer: excited
Better: annoyed
Pattern: This makes social English feel like reading hidden subtitles.
6. Listening / A2
0%Sample answer: Do you want to hold coffee?
Better: Do you want to get coffee?
Pattern: Fast speech combines reductions with casual idioms. Use it as a practical signal for real listening speed practice.
7. Listening / B1
0%Sample answer: kind and
Better: kind of
Pattern: Fast speech often hides common two-word phrases inside one sound.