10 More TOEIC Questions Nobody Explains Clearly
This article continues our quiet TOEIC questions series: the specific, easily ignored questions serious test-takers ask when ordinary advice does not help. This second article continues the same idea. These are not always the biggest search terms, but they are often the questions that reveal the real reason a score is stuck.
Generic advice usually says to study more vocabulary, do more listening, practise more grammar, or take another mock test. Sometimes that advice is useful. But if the same problem keeps returning, the issue may not be quantity. It may be test behaviour, review quality, emotional control, timing, or fatigue.
At My TOEIC Coach, these questions matter because they show what is happening inside the test-taker’s process. A person who asks, “Why do easy questions feel hard in the real test?” is not looking for motivation. They are looking for diagnosis.
Here are the next 10 TOEIC questions worth asking.
1. Why do easy TOEIC questions feel harder in the real test?
Easy questions can feel harder in the real test because the test changes your state. At home, you may be calm, flexible, and able to pause mentally. In the test, you are dealing with timing, nerves, fatigue, other people in the room, and the pressure of knowing the score matters.
This often affects Over Thinkers. They look at a question they could normally answer, then begin checking too much. They wonder if there is a trap, doubt their first answer, and spend too long proving something that should have been simple. Speed Trap learners can have the opposite problem: they recognise something familiar, rush, and miss the small detail that makes the answer wrong.
The solution is not to assume your English disappeared. It did not. The test environment exposed a performance gap. Add mild pressure to practice: timed sets, no pausing, and review of hesitation, not just wrong answers.
2. How do I know if I need more vocabulary or better strategy?
This is a better question than “How many words should I memorise?” Some test-takers genuinely need more vocabulary. Others know enough words to improve, but they are losing points because of timing, translation, poor review, or weak evidence checking.
Look at your mistakes carefully. If you miss a question because key words are completely unknown, vocabulary is probably part of the problem. If you know the words during review but missed the answer during the test, the issue is more likely strategy or test behaviour. If you understand the sentence slowly but cannot decide quickly, the problem may be processing under pressure.
This question often connects to the Memoriser, Translator, and Speed Trap blocks. Vocabulary helps only when it becomes usable in context. Strategy helps only when it is based on the actual reason for the mistake. The answer is rarely “vocabulary or strategy.” Usually, it is knowing which one is costing you more points right now.
3. Why do I understand slowly but fail under time pressure?
Understanding slowly is still understanding, but TOEIC does not give unlimited time. A sentence that becomes clear after one or two minutes may still be too slow for test performance. This is not a moral problem. It is a timing and processing problem.
This often appears in the Translator block. The learner can understand English, but only after converting too much of it into Japanese. It can also appear in the Over Thinker block, where the learner keeps checking grammar or meaning until they feel certain. In both cases, the final answer may be correct during review, but the test has already moved on.
The goal is not to remove careful study. Careful study is useful. The goal is to build faster recognition of common TOEIC patterns: requests, schedule changes, reasons, comparisons, conditions, and next actions. You are not trying to become careless. You are trying to make useful meaning recognition faster and more automatic.
4. Should I take another TOEIC test immediately after a bad score?
Sometimes another test is reasonable. If you were sick, slept badly, made a registration mistake, or had one unusual bad day, a quick retest may make sense. But if the same score pattern has appeared more than once, taking another test immediately may only repeat the same problem.
A bad score should trigger a short review before a new application. Ask what broke: listening focus, reading stamina, Part 5 timing, translation speed, panic, fatigue, or weak review. If you cannot answer that question, you may not yet be ready for another test.
This is especially important for Burnout learners. Booking another test can feel productive, but it can also increase pressure without improving the system. Do not use another test as emotional revenge against the last score. Use it when you know what you are trying to prove, because a test date should create structure, not panic.
5. Why do I keep choosing the almost right answer?
The almost right answer is one of the most painful TOEIC problems because it feels reasonable. You did not choose something random. You chose something familiar, close, or emotionally convincing. That is exactly why the mistake matters.
This usually connects to the Over Thinker, Speed Trap, or Memoriser blocks. The Over Thinker may talk themselves into a choice because it seems possible. The Speed Trap learner may grab a familiar phrase and move too quickly. The Memoriser may recognise vocabulary but miss how the sentence or conversation actually uses it.
The fix is evidence checking. Before choosing, ask: where is the proof? Did the text or audio directly support this answer, or does it only feel related? TOEIC distractors often live close to the truth. They may use related vocabulary, similar situations, or ideas that sound plausible. The correct answer is not the one that feels familiar. It is the one supported by evidence.
6. Why do I feel tired before Reading even starts?
Many test-takers think Reading begins when the Reading section begins. Physically, yes. Mentally, not quite. You have already used attention, memory, emotional control, and decision-making energy during Listening. By the time Reading begins, some test-takers are already carrying fatigue.
This is often a Burnout or Speed Trap problem. If you fight every Listening question too intensely, panic after missed phrases, or overthink uncertain answers, you may enter Reading with less mental energy than you realise. Then Part 7 feels heavier, even if your vocabulary has not changed.
The answer is not only “build more reading skill.” You also need better energy management. Practise Listening recovery, do not emotionally chase every missed sentence, and train Reading under mild fatigue sometimes so the transition feels familiar. If Reading always collapses, the cause may begin before Reading starts.
7. Can doing too many practice tests hurt my TOEIC score?
Practice tests are useful, but only if they create information. If you take test after test without proper review, you may simply rehearse the same mistakes while adding fatigue and frustration.
This is a common Burnout and Memoriser problem. The learner feels serious because they are doing many questions, but the review is shallow. They check the answer, read the explanation, feel temporary relief, and move on. The next test then repeats the same timing problem, translation problem, or trap mistake.
A mock test should answer specific questions. Did I lose time in Part 5? Did I collapse near the end of Reading? Did I miss Listening answers because of vocabulary, speed, or attention? Did I guess too often? Without questions like these, a practice test becomes measurement rather than learning. Doing more tests is not automatically bad; doing more tests without diagnosis is the risk.
8. Why do I know the grammar rule but still miss Part 5?
Knowing a grammar rule is not the same as recognising its test role quickly. During study, you can read an explanation slowly and understand it. In Part 5, you must identify the clue, understand the sentence structure, and choose under time pressure.
This is often an Over Thinker or Translator problem. The Over Thinker knows the rule but spends too long checking every possibility. The Translator understands the sentence after converting it into Japanese, but loses speed. Sometimes it is also a Memoriser issue: the learner remembers the name of the rule but cannot apply it inside a real sentence.
Part 5 improvement often comes from training recognition, not collecting more explanations. Ask what the question is really testing: part of speech, verb form, preposition, conjunction, word family, or sentence structure. Then review why the wrong answers were wrong. A rule is useful only when it becomes a fast decision.
9. What should I write in a TOEIC error log?
A useful TOEIC error log should not be a graveyard of wrong answers. It should show why the mistake happened.
One simple version is to record the question type, the wrong answer you chose, the correct answer, and the reason for the mistake. The reason is the most important part. Was it vocabulary, grammar, translation, timing, a trap, fatigue, lack of evidence, or panic?
For example, “wrong answer” is not enough. “I chose a familiar word without checking the sentence” is useful. “I translated too slowly and lost the next listening clue” is useful. “I understood during review but not under time pressure” is useful.
This connects to all six learning blocks because every block creates a different type of mistake. The goal of an error log is not to make you feel guilty. The goal is to make the pattern visible.
10. Why does listening practice feel like noise?
Listening practice feels like noise when you are exposed to sound without a clear listening task. You may hear words, recognise pieces, and understand the topic, but still feel that the audio is moving past you too quickly.
This is the Passive Listener block. The problem is not always your ears. Often, the problem is that your attention has no job. You are trying to catch everything, so you do not know which information matters.
Before listening, choose a target. Are you listening for who is speaking, where they are, what the problem is, what the speaker wants, or what action comes next? After listening, review the cause of the miss. Did you lose the situation, miss a detail, translate too slowly, or panic after one unknown word?
Listening becomes less like noise when it has structure. The first step is not always more audio. Sometimes it is better listening behaviour.
The Small Questions Show the Real Problem
These questions are small only on the surface. Underneath them are serious TOEIC problems: pressure, translation, fatigue, timing, weak review, shallow vocabulary learning, and passive listening.
This is why low-volume questions matter. They often come from test-takers who are paying close attention to their own failures. They do not need generic advice. They need a better diagnosis.
At My TOEIC Coach, we do not see these questions as minor. We see them as signals. If a test-taker can ask the right question, they are already closer to finding the right study behaviour.
Before you add more practice tests, memorise another word list, or blame yourself for being inconsistent, ask what your quiet TOEIC question is trying to show you.
If you are not sure, take the TOEIC Learning Block Diagnostic and find out which block may be controlling your score.