What is the B2 First (FCE) Speaking test like? The Cambridge First speaking test takes 14 minutes. You do the test with another candidate. Candidates are expected to be able to respond to questions and to interact in conversational English. Part 1 A conversation between the examiner and each...
This certificate is equivalent to level B2 of the CEFR and is now called the B2 First. In the test, you’ll answer personal questions and give your opinion about different topics. You’ll have to compare and describe two images. Then you’ll have to have a conversation with your test pa...
Our English trainers are experienced with the most popular international exams such as IELTS Academic, Cambridge B2 First (FCE), C1 Advanced (CAE) and C2 Proficiency (CPE). Your English trainer can give you continuous speaking practice and feedback. This helps you to express yourself: ...
Articles, guides, strategies, rubric and practice questions, sample answers and more for IELTS, Cambridge First, Advanced and Proficiency speaking and writing
In the final part, you and and the examiner have a more in-depth discussion with more abstract questions based about the same topic as Part Two.Each page contains a full example of a Speaking section, with Parts One, Two and Three....
Boost your IELTS Speaking practice with a popular topic, Health and Healthcare, and get a self-check with Part 1, 2 & 3 sample answers and Band 9 vocabulary.
FluentU helps you learn fast with useful questions and multiple examples.Learn more. The best part? FluentU remembers the vocabulary that you’re learning. It gives you extra practice with difficult words—and reminds you when it’s time to review what you’ve learned. You have a truly pers...
Ask questions whenever the other person stops and there’s something you want to know more about. For example, if you see your friend with a good-looking car, you can say something like“Wow, that’s a nice car! What make and model is it?”The “compliment + question” formula works...
SEH:I had a Ph.D. thesis planned out that I likely would have stayed at Cambridge anddone. I wasn’t thinking at the time about mental illness. I was really thinking about how the brain gives rise to the mind, questions like that. But it was hard in the 1970s to find people reall...
DISCUSSION We analyse frequencies of halpogroups and estimates of TMRCA to answer two questions: (a) Is there evidence of more than one 'expansion' of paternal line ancestors of Bantu-speaking people living in present day sub-Saharan Africa? and (b) If so, did those 'expansions' take ...