VERSANT TEST PRACTICE SENTENCE BUILDS VERSANT COURSE

Learn the following structure for the VERSANT TEST by PRACTICING PART C SENTENCE BUILDS FROM OUR VERSANT COURSE


Versant test: Sentence builds


Structure:
You will get 3 short phrases in random order.
You will need to arrange them into one single sentence.
You will have 8 seconds to do answer

What would be evaluated during this task?
Listening
Pronunciation
Mastery Sentence

Get ready to listen to the following sentence builds

How can you practice?
Participate in our how-to crack the versant test master class.
Participare in our versant course

Or by your own.
Pick up a book and split the sentence into three parts.


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Part C: Sentence Builds


For the Sentence Builds task, candidates hear three short phrases and are asked to rearrange them to make a sentence. The phrases are presented in a random order (excluding the original word order), and the candidate says a reasonable and grammatical sentence that comprises exactly the three given phrases.


Examples: 

my boss / to London / moved
of your family / any pictures / do you have 
to their leader / listened carefully / the young men

To correctly complete this task, a candidate must understand the possible meanings of the phrases and know-how they might combine with other phrasal material, both with regard to syntax and pragmatics. 


The length and complexity of the sentence that can be built are constrained by the size of the linguistic unit (e.g., one-word versus a three-word phrase) that a person can hold in verbal working memory. 


This is important to measure because it reflects the candidate’s ability to access and retrieve lexical items and to build phrases and clause structures automatically. The more automatic these processes are, the more the candidate’s facility is in spoken English. 


The Sentence Builds task involves constructing and articulating entire sentences. As such, it is a measure of candidates’ mastery of sentences in addition to their pronunciation and fluency.










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