Conditional Sentences
Conditional Sentences
CONDITIONALS
Unreal conditionals:
oSecond Conditional:
Conditional
If I owned a car, I would drive to work.
oThird Conditional:
If I had studied harder, I would have passed the
test.
oMixed Conditional:
If I had finished my work yesterday, I wouldn't
be so stressed out today.
ZERO CONDITIONAL
We can also reverse the order of the condition and result in the
sentence, with no change in meaning:
We'll go to the beach if it's sunny tomorrow.
We'll go to the movies if it rains tomorrow.
Other words besides “If”
In first conditional sentences, it is possible to use other words instead of
“if” or “unless”:
I wish I …
I wish I had a lot of money to buy a
house.
SECOND CONDITIONAL
I wish…
I wish I knew his number…
Practise time! 2nd conditional
Complete the sentences with the verbs in the correct
tenses. Pay careful attention to which part of the
sentence is the condition, and which part is the
result! When possible, abbreviate “would” to “‘d”.
a) ate
If you _____(eat) ‘d have
a healthy breakfast, you __________
(have) more energy.
b) ‘d call (call) him if I ___________
I ___________ had (have) his
number.
c) were
If he __________ (be) more organized, he
__________________
wouldn’t forget (not forget) so many things.
d) would it take (it take) if we
How long _________________
hired (hire) someone to do this work?
__________
FIRST v. SECOND CONDITIONAL
Other examples:
If we had brought our camera, we might have taken a picture.
Sarah could have learnt French if she had taken lessons.
The third conditional refers to the past and it is not based on facts. It
expresses an impossible situation.
THIRD CONDITIONAL
1. If it rains today, you will get wet (you don’t have an umbrella).
This is still possible to happen.
“If only” has the same meaning as “I wish” but it’s more
emphatic. Its equivalent in Spanish is “ojalá” (whatever the object
is) or “si al menos”. The clause with “if only” often stands alone,
without a main clause.
WISH – IF ONLY… (2)
Both “wish” and “if only” can be used with:
a) Past simple (to talk about the present events. It expresses regret
that things are not different) :
I wish / If only I had a better job. I wish I was taller.
Remember! To be in the past: always “were”: I wish were that simple!
b) Past Perfect (to talk about the past and it expresses regret about
them.)
Oh, I wasn’t expecting you. I wish you had called before coming over.
If only she hadn’t told the police, everything would have been all right.
c) Could / Would + infinitive (We’re not happy about a situation (regret,
annoyance) and we wish it changes in the future).
I wish I could afford it. If only it would stop raining!
Everybody wishes you would go home. (Why don’t you go home?)
If the subject is “I” or ”we” => “could” is often used.
I wish our sales would improve <=> I wish we could go together.
Thanks to Shayna Oliveira (Advance Grammar Course
www.espressoenglish.net). Her book has been a great help!