Grammar Reference - Third Conditional

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Grammar Reference

1) The third conditional


We use the third conditional to talk about imagined past events: things that might have
happened in the past, but didnt happen.
If Id known it was your birthday, Id have bought you a present.
If the taxi had arrived on time, he wouldnt have missed the plane.
A conditional sentence has two parts. In the third conditional, the if part is the imaginary
situation in the past, and the main part is what could have happened (but didnt happen)
as a result. We make the third conditional with if + past perfect, and would have +
past participle.
If Id known it was your birthday (This is the imaginary situation in the past)
Id have bought you a present. (This is the imaginary result of the situation in the past)
The two parts can come in any order. When we write, we put a comma between
the if part and the result part. You dont use a comma when the result part comes first.

If Id known it was your birthday, Id have bought you a present.

Id have bought you a present if Id known it was your birthday.

If the taxi had arrived on time, Jack wouldnt have missed the plane.

Jack wouldnt have missed the plane if the taxi had arrived on time.

We use the past perfect in the if part to show the situation is imaginary and didnt
actually happen. The result part of the sentence tells us the imaginary result of this
situation.
If there had been any snow, wed have gone skiing. (There wasnt any snow; we didnt
go skiing.)
If it hadnt been raining, wed have had a picnic.(It was raining; we didnt have a
picnic.)

Form
Positive
If youd asked me to marry you, Id have said no.
Wed have been in trouble if wed missed the last train.
Negative
She wouldnt have become ill if shed taken the medicine.

It would have been better if they hadnt come to the party.


If you hadnt been so friendly, I wouldnt have talked to you.
Question
What would they have done if theyd lost their jobs?
If Id told him the truth, how would he have felt?
Short answer
In short answers, you use would/wouldnt.
If youd needed help, would you have asked me?
Yes, I would. / No, I wouldnt.
Take note: past continuous
We can use the past continuous in the if part of the sentence.
If hed been driving more carefully, he wouldnt have had an accident.
I wouldnt have met my girlfriend if Id been living abroad.

Take note: modals


We can use other modal verbs in the result part, for example might. Might shows we
are less certain than when we use will.
We might have been happier if wed bought the other house.
If he hadnt got up so late, he might not have missed the train.

Take note: I wish and If only


We use I wish or If only with the past perfect when we are sorry about something that
happened in the past, and we imagine doing things differently.
I wish Id stayed in bed this morning. (Im having a bad day today.)
If only Id stayed in bed this morning.
I wish Id picked the other horse! (My horse didnt win the race.)
If only Id picked the other horse!

Spoken English
In the third conditional, we usually use a short form of had and had not when we
speak: I had = I'd, I had not = I hadnt. We also use a short form of would and would
not: I would = I'd, he would = he'd, I would not = I wouldnt, etc.
Wed have been unhappy if wed lost the game.
We wouldnt have been happy if we hadnt won the game.

The third conditional is sometimes confusing because Id can mean both I had and I
would so listen carefully! And remember that Id in the if part is I had, and Id in the
result part is I would.

2) Double contractions
In spoken English, people often use contractions like this: I will becomes I'll and you
would becomes you'd. Double contractions are when we shorten three words, like this:
I would have -> I'd've
could not have -> couldn't've
might not have -> mightn't've
must not have -> mustn't've
cannot have -> can't've
you would have -> you'd've
he would have -> he'd've
she would have -> she'd've
we would have -> we'd've
they would have -> they'd've

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