Conditional Sentences Are Also Known As Conditional Clauses or If Clauses
Conditional Sentences Are Also Known As Conditional Clauses or If Clauses
Conditional Sentences Are Also Known As Conditional Clauses or If Clauses
They are used to express that the action in the main clause (without if) can only take place if a certain condition (in the clause with if) is fulfilled. There are three types of Conditional Sentences.
Example: If I had found her address, I would have sent her an invitation.
more on Conditional Sentences Type III
IF
If
it rains
Notice that we are thinking about a future condition. It is not raining yet. But the sky is cloudy and you think that it could rain. We use the present simple tense to talk about the possible future condition. We use WILL + base verb to talk about the possible future result. The important thing about the first conditional is that there is a real possibility that the condition will happen. Here are some more examples (do you remember the two basic structures: [IF condition result] and [result IF condition]?): IF condition present simple If If If If If I see Mary Tara is free tomorrow they do not pass their exam it rains tomorrow it rains tomorrow result WILL + base verb I will tell her. he will invite her. their teacher will be sad. will you stay at home? what will you do?
IF
I will tell Mary He will invite Tara Their teacher will be sad Will you stay at home What will you do
if if if if if
I see her. she is free tomorrow. they do not pass their exam. it rains tomorrow? it rains tomorrow?
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 Would you be surprised What would you do
IF
if if if if
I married Mary. he became rich. it snowed next July? it snowed next July?
Notice that we are thinking about an impossible past condition. You did not win the lottery. So the condition was not true, and that particular condition can never be true because it is finished. We use the past perfect tense to talk about the impossible past condition. We use WOULD HAVE + past participle to talk about the impossible past result. The important thing about the third conditional is that both the condition and result are impossible now. Sometimes, we use should have, could have, might have instead of would have, for example: If you had bought a lottery ticket, you might have won. Look at some more examples in the tables below: IF condition past perfect If If I had seen Mary Tara had been free yesterday result WOULD HAVE + past participle I would have told her. I would have invited her.
If If If
they had not passed their exam it had rained yesterday it had rained yesterday
their teacher would have been sad. would you have stayed at home? what would you have done?
result WOULD HAVE + past participle I would have told Mary I would have invited Tara Their teacher would have been sad Would you have stayed at home What would you have done
IF
if if if if if
I had seen her. she had been free yesterday. they had not passed their exam. it had rained yesterday? it had rained yesterday?
Notice that we are thinking about a result that is always true for this condition. The result of the condition is an absolute certainty. We are not thinking about the future or the past, or even the present. We are thinking about a simple fact. We use the present simple tense to talk about the condition. We also use the present simple tense to talk about the result. The important thing about the zero conditional is that the condition always has the same result. We can also use when instead of if, for example: When I get up late I miss my bus. Look at some more examples in the tables below: IF condition present simple If If If If I miss the 8 o'clock bus I am late for work people don't eat you heat ice result present simple I am late for work. my boss gets angry. they get hungry. does it melt?
IF
if
if if if