T O P
Vonatar-74

You are a masochist


BjoernHeck

El Barbarian


lawrencedarcy

Wow congrats dude.


Inner_Staff1250

If it could be arranged online and/or in August, I might consider it.


GingerInTheSummer

Respect dude I thought people like you were a myth


Fuckceda

Thank you mate, the problem is that at these stages almost the only option is to go for private tutors and groups lessons are much more fun


GingerInTheSummer

I’m always happy to meet up and practice mate if you can tolerate my B1-ish level though I appreciate there may not be much in it for you 😂 (edited)


KikiW40

Gratuluję! 😀


DzikiJuzek

Isn't b1 higher than b2? C1 means you are borderline native speaker if if i recall and I'm not sure there are many places test for it. Ps. Some natives wouldn't get c1 to be honest


Katatoniczka

A1 -> A2 -> B1 -> B2 -> C1 -> C2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common\_European\_Framework\_of\_Reference\_for\_Languages


l0rddenning

B2 is higher than B1, if I recall correctly the level 1 is just speaking/listening, where as level 2 includes reading/writing as well as speaking/listening.


DzikiJuzek

I'm located in the uk at the moment, here it's opposite. On any level, level 2 is lower than level 1. C1 > c2, etc. Back in my day, there were no official levels. It was about fluency.


xdarkeaglex

2 is always higher than 1 in Europe


DzikiJuzek

Bit odd for english that teacher said lvl 1 was higher. And uk is not in europe nowadays 😉 Was just curious


ubant

How is UK not in Europe? Lol


DzikiJuzek

Brexit 🤣 Should i add /s at end of last comment? 🤣


Dosia12

Bro, Europe as a continent, not european union


xdarkeaglex

Mam B1/B2 i C1 w dwóch różnych językach, piszę z doświadczenia


DzikiJuzek

Corce zabraklo 5 ptk do b1 a ma dopiero 14 lat (jest w polsce) to.znaczy ze zajebiscie sobie radzi


williambobbins

Get a better teacher ;)


l0rddenning

I may be wrong about the speaking/listening & reading/writing difference in testing, but I am certain the order of difficulty from easiest to hardest is A1, A2, B1, B2, C1, C2. As far as I’m aware it is exactly the same, the UK uses CEFR standards: https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages/table-1-cefr-3.3-common-reference-levels-global-scale My partner had to recently take an English test in the UK at a government approved test centre for a UK visa, C2 was definitely harder than C1.


_naviannah_

That's simply not true. Just look at [Cambridge certifications](https://www.cambridgeenglish.org/exams-and-tests/first/): **B2** - FCE (First Certificate in English) This exam is the **logical step** in your language learning journey **between B1** Preliminary **and C1** Advanced.