New Interactive Quizzes Launched to Track World Cup Progress
推出全新互動測驗,追蹤世界盃進展
Introduction
Several digital platforms have launched a series of quizzes to test how much users know about the current World Cup.
數個數位平台推出了一系列測驗,以測試用戶對現屆世界盃的了解程度。
Main Body
These quizzes were released during the early stages of the tournament, which have already seen many goals and unexpected results. One specific quiz provides a detailed review of the week's events and asks users for their feedback on whether the questions were difficult and if they managed to get a perfect score.
這些測驗在賽事初期推出,而目前已出現許多進球與出乎意料的結果。其中一個特定測驗詳細回顧了該週的事件,並詢問用戶對於問題難易度的看法,以及是否獲得滿分。
Furthermore, a second quiz has been created to mark the fifth day of the competition. In this exercise, users must identify the top goalscorers from the twenty highest-ranked nations according to the FIFA world rankings. To make these tools more accessible, a notification system has been added to send future sports questions directly to users' devices.
此外,還建立了第二個測驗以標誌比賽的第五天。在這次練習中,用戶必須根據 FIFA 世界排名,從前 20 名的國家中識別出最高得分者。為了提高這些工具的便利性,系統已新增通知功能,可將未來的體育問題直接發送到用戶的裝置中。
Conclusion
Users are now encouraged to take part in these knowledge tests and subscribe to receive further updates.
現在鼓勵用戶參與這些知識測驗,並訂閱以接收進一步的更新。
Vocabulary Learning
🚀 The 'B2 Power-Up': Moving from Basic to Precise
At the A2 level, you usually use simple words like 'made', 'did', or 'put'. To reach B2, you need Precise Verbs. Look at how this text describes actions. Instead of saying "they made a quiz," the author uses:
"Launched a series of quizzes"
Why this matters: In English, launch isn't just for rockets. When we talk about apps, websites, or products, launch sounds professional and fluent.
🛠️ The 'Sophisticated Swap' List
Stop using 'basic' words and try these replacements found in the text:
| A2 Word (Basic) | B2 Word (Precise) | Context from Article |
|---|---|---|
| Start/Make | Launch | ...platforms have launched a series... |
| Show/Tell | Identify | ...users must identify the top goalscorers... |
| Give/Send | Provide | ...one specific quiz provides a detailed review... |
🧠 Pro Tip: The 'Connector' Secret
Notice the word "Furthermore" at the start of the second paragraph.
An A2 student says: "And also, there is another quiz."
A B2 student says: "Furthermore, a second quiz has been created."
The Rule: Use Furthermore when you are adding a strong, important point to your argument. It acts like a bridge, making your writing flow like a native speaker's instead of a list of short sentences.