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Second Conditional Grammar

The document discusses the second conditional, which refers to an unreal possibility or dream about the future. It explains that the second conditional uses the past simple tense to talk about a future condition and "would" plus the base verb to talk about the future result. Examples are provided such as "If I won the lottery, I would buy a car" to illustrate that there is no real possibility of the condition occurring.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views2 pages

Second Conditional Grammar

The document discusses the second conditional, which refers to an unreal possibility or dream about the future. It explains that the second conditional uses the past simple tense to talk about a future condition and "would" plus the base verb to talk about the future result. Examples are provided such as "If I won the lottery, I would buy a car" to illustrate that there is no real possibility of the condition occurring.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Second Conditional: unreal possibility or dream

The second conditional is like the first conditional. We are still thinking about the future. We are thinking about a particular condition in the future, and the result of this condition. But there is not a real possibility that this condition will happen. For example, you do not have a lottery ticket. Is it possible to win? No! No lottery ticket, no win! But maybe you will buy a lottery ticket in the future. So you can think about winning in the future, like a dream. It's not very real, but it's still possible. IF condition past simple If I won the lottery result WOULD + base verb I would buy a car.

Notice that we are thinking about a future condition. We use the past simple tense to talk about the future condition. We use WOULD + base verb to talk about the future result. The important thing about the second conditional is that there is an unreal possibility that the condition will happen. Here are some more examples: IF condition past simple If If If If I married Mary Ram became rich it snowed next July it snowed next July result WOULD + base verb I would be happy. she would marry him. would you be surprised? what would you do?

result WOULD + base verb I would be happy She would marry Ram

IF

condition past simple

if if

I married Mary. he became rich.

Would you be surprised What would you do

if if

it snowed next July? it snowed next July?

Sometimes, we use should, could or might instead of would, for example: If I won a million dollars, I could stop working.

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