Conditional Review in Concise
Conditional Review in Concise
Conditionals review
Meaning and use
Although there are quite a few different ways of forming conditional sentences there
are common patterns known as zero, first, second and third conditionals.
Zero conditionals
Used to refer to general truths, scientific facts and the predictable results of particular
actions. One thing happens and because of this something else happens. In zero
conditionals if and when have the same meaning.
First conditionals
Used when we want to talk about something that is likely to happen in the future
after a specific set of circumstances, the condition. If is used is when the condition is
possible and when is used when the condition is certain to happen.
If I go to the shops, I’ll get some bread. (I might not go to the shops)
When I go to the shops, I’ll get some bread. (I’m definitely going to the shops)
If you’ve finished your homework by six, you can go out and play.
When you’re having your party, please keep the noise down!
Second conditionals
Refer to an imagined present result of an unlikely or impossible present condition.
If I had the money, I’d travel around the world. (I don’t have the money)
If I were you, I’d think about leaving him. (I’m not you)
Third conditionals
Refer to an imagined past result of something that didn’t happen in the past.
If I had known you were coming, I wouldn’t have prepared the cheese dish.
(I didn’t know you were coming. I prepared a cheese dish.)
If I had known then what I know now, I wouldn’t have wasted so much time at
university.
(I didn’t know then what I know now. I did waste a lot of time at university.)
Form
Conditional sentences usually have two parts. There is the if clause (sometimes
called the conditional clause) and the result clause (sometimes called the main
clause). The clauses can come in any order.
Zero conditional
If clause:
if/when + present simple
Result clause:
present simple
First conditional
If clause:
if/when + present simple
Result clause:
will / 'll + infinitive without to / imperative
Second conditional
If clause:
if + past simple (exception: verb 'to be' takes 'were' in 1st and 2nd person)
Result clause:
would / 'd + infinitive without to
Third conditional
If clause:
if + past perfect
Main clause:
would / 'd + have / 've + past participle
If you hadn't insisted on changing your shirt we wouldn't've missed the bus.
First conditional
If I go to the beach at the weekend, I might try out my new wet suit.
Second conditional
Third conditional
Mixed conditionals combine the structure of type 2 and type 3 conditionals when
the time (past, present and future) referred to in the if and result clauses are not the
same.
something that didn’t happen in the past and the result of that condition in the present
If I weren’t going on holiday next week, I could have accepted that offer of work.
(I am going on holiday in the future which is why I didn’t accept the offer of work in
the past.)