Why Generic Descriptions Cost You Marks in Part 2
It’s a familiar moment: you turn over your cue card and see the prompt, “Describe a person you admire.” Instantly, your mind races to safe territory—phrases you’ve practiced dozens of times. “She is kind and hardworking.” “He always helps others.” But as you speak, you sense the answer drifting into the same territory as everyone else’s. The examiner’s face remains neutral. You know the band descriptors reward fluency and coherence, lexical resource, and grammatical range, but your answer feels flat. Why? Because generic language, even if correct, rarely convinces the examiner you’re talking about a real person.
It’s not just about avoiding mistakes. When your description could fit anyone, it’s difficult to expand naturally. The examiner listens for answers that sound lived-in and specific, not just accurate.
What Makes a Description Feel Real?
Authentic descriptions are built on the small, telling details that make people memorable. Consider these two responses to the prompt, “Describe a person you admire.”
Weaker answer:
“I want to talk about my mother. She is a very nice person. She is always helpful and hardworking. She cares about everyone and supports me in my life. I admire her because she is dedicated to her family.”
This response is clear and correct, but it’s vague. The examiner hears no vivid details—nothing that separates your mother from anyone else’s. There’s little opportunity to show varied vocabulary or complex grammar.
Stronger answer:
“I’d like to describe my mother, who has a habit of humming old pop songs while she cooks dinner every evening. She’s the kind of person who remembers everyone’s birthday, even distant relatives, and always makes a point of calling them. What I admire most is her ability to stay calm, even when our house feels chaotic—like last winter, when our heating broke and she turned it into an indoor camping adventure for us. Her sense of humor makes stressful situations bearable.”
This response feels genuine. It’s grounded in believable details—humming songs, remembering birthdays, turning a crisis into a game. The language is more varied and the answer is unmistakably personal. That’s what examiners reward under fluency and coherence and lexical resource.
How to Move Beyond Safe Adjectives
Most candidates reach for big adjectives: “kind,” “amazing,” “brilliant.” But these words rarely bring your answer to life. Instead, select one or two small, true things about the person—habits, routines, or a specific memory. Describe what they actually do, not just what they’re like.
For example, if you’re describing a teacher, avoid “He was a great teacher who explained things well.” Instead, ask yourself: What did he do that others didn’t? Maybe he drew cartoons on the whiteboard, stayed after class to answer questions, or told funny stories to make history interesting. These concrete images help your answer stand out.
If you struggle to find personal stories, try building your own answer bank with tools like generate a full quarter of answers from your own stories. Practicing with your own experiences makes it easier to avoid generic language and respond naturally.
Practice: Transforming a Generic Cue Card Answer
Let’s apply this to another typical cue card: “Describe a person who has influenced you.”
Generic answer:
“The person who has influenced me is my uncle. He is very smart and always gives me good advice. I respect him a lot and want to be like him.”
Improved answer:
“I’d like to talk about my uncle, who taught me how to fix bicycles when I was ten. He never got impatient, even when I made the same mistake three times in a row. I remember one Saturday afternoon, he let me try to repair his old mountain bike, and when I finally got it right, he bought me ice cream to celebrate. Because of him, I learned not just practical skills, but also how to keep trying when something seems difficult.”
Notice how the improved response uses a specific memory and concrete actions to show the uncle’s personality. This approach demonstrates language range and helps you sound fluent because you’re describing what actually happened, not reciting a formula.
Convincing the Examiner Your Story Is Real
Examiners are trained to spot memorized phrases and recycled answers. If you use the same “kind, friendly, helpful” description for every person, your score may be limited. The band descriptors for Band 7 and above highlight the ability to “speak at length with appropriate detail.” Personal, believable stories are the quickest way to show this skill.
If you want to see how different band levels are described, you can check the band packages. But ultimately, what matters is how you use your own experiences to answer the cue card, not how many advanced words you memorize.
Bringing Your Descriptions to Life
To move from generic to distinctive, focus on details only you could share. Don’t chase the most impressive vocabulary—instead, choose moments, habits, or quirks that make your answer unmistakably yours. That’s what examiners notice—and that’s what lifts your score.




