Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - How to judge a person's oral English level

How to judge a person's oral English level

When you ask this question, you must answer it well: it's actually very simple, see if you can understand each other's meaning deeply.

Don't you understand? Put it more simply: after listening to each other, can you repeat what they mean to make sure you understand?

Yes, it means you understand, but you can't. Either you fail English or you don't pay attention to each other. It's simple.

At present, some people in China take exams all day, so they just take pictures, especially CET-4 and CET-6. To tell the truth, passing the exam does not necessarily mean how good English can be. I suggest you use the following criteria to evaluate your language strength before deciding whether to register for the exam:

Level 1: My English communication ability is limited. Apart from daily basic expressions, I can only communicate with basic verbs, nouns and subject words, and it is difficult to communicate with others in complete sentences.

Case: English can only speak ABCDEFG, so it is difficult to communicate.

Level 2: I have a little English communication ability, and can use a limited number of verbs, nouns and adjectives to form complete sentences for communication; The number of words available is limited, and it is impossible to describe more abstract concepts.

Case: You can say a few words in English, such as how are you? I'm fine, thank you, and you? I like this one, not that one. But talking too much is embarrassing, because I don't know what to say when the ink is used up.

Level 3: able to communicate in English, basically able to express words and communicate effectively, but prone to vocabulary misuse or grammatical errors in unfamiliar situations, knowing each other's content but unable to give appropriate responses; Explain simple and abstract concepts, but fail to grasp deep and abstract cultural issues such as culture, politics and economy.

Case: At first, you can communicate in English at work, and the other party has a How of you day. You can reply "It's ok, but you are tired to exercise". There is nothing wrong with ordinary small talk, but when it comes to "What do you think of Trump and Hillary?" Or "What's the difference between China and the United States?" This kind of question is easy to be confused, because the scope is too large and abstract, and this level of dialogue needs abstract words to explain its own ideas.

CET-4: Fluent communication in English with few mistakes; In dialogue, words can convey meaning, communicate effectively, understand humorous or ironic meaning between lines, and sometimes joke in English.

Example: You can already use English fluently. No matter what your accent is, the British and Americans you talk to often think that you were born abroad and can participate in the so-called Con-call discussion at work normally. Sometimes there are some grammatical mistakes, such as the lack of s or Yes in He agree and Yes, and the fact that yes and she has become an episode like she has, but this is harmless.

Level 5: There are almost no grammatical mistakes, and you can skillfully use language to hint, satirize, laugh and even make speeches; Apart from basic grammar, I am very familiar with dialects and idioms of British and American cultures and can use them according to local conditions.

However, learn from your brothers and sisters and remember that the above discussion is all about your English. To be honest, it doesn't make much sense to focus on tone. A person's speech is always based on content, supplemented by tone. We shouldn't let a person's tone affect his evaluation of what he said: it seems strange to agree with a straw bag who speaks pure royal English ... if you don't agree with me.

So, do you know your siblings?

Find another article to talk about sometime.