First Conditional: real possibility
We are talking about the
future. We are thinking about a particular condition or situation in the
future, and the result of this condition. There is a real possibility that this
condition will happen. For example, it is morning. You are at home. You plan to
play tennis this afternoon. But there are some clouds in the sky. Imagine that
it rains. What will you do?
IF
|
condition
|
result
|
|
present simple
|
WILL + base verb
|
If
|
it rains
|
I will stay at home.
|
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
|
result
|
|
present simple
|
WILL + base verb
|
If
|
I see Mary
|
I will tell her.
|
If
|
Tara is free tomorrow
|
he will invite her.
|
If
|
they do not pass their exam
|
their teacher will be sad.
|
If
|
it rains tomorrow
|
will you stay at home?
|
If
|
it rains tomorrow
|
what will you do?
|
result
|
IF
|
condition
|
WILL + base verb
|
|
present simple
|
I will tell Mary
|
if
|
I see her.
|
He will invite Tara
|
if
|
she is free tomorrow.
|
Their teacher will be sad
|
if
|
they do not pass their exam.
|
Will you stay at home
|
if
|
it rains tomorrow?
|
What will you do
|
if
|
it rains tomorrow?
|
Sometimes, we use shall, can, or may instead of will, for example: If you are good today, you can watch TV tonight.
Exercise on First Conditional .
Exercise on First Conditional .
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
|
result
|
|
past simple
|
WOULD + base verb
|
If
|
I won the lottery
|
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
|
result
|
|
past simple
|
WOULD + base verb
|
If
|
I married Mary
|
I would be happy.
|
If
|
Ram became rich
|
she would marry him.
|
If
|
it snowed next July
|
would you be surprised?
|
If
|
it snowed next July
|
what would you do?
|
result
|
IF
|
condition
|
WOULD + base verb
|
|
past simple
|
I would be happy
|
if
|
I married Mary.
|
She would marry Ram
|
if
|
he became rich.
|
Would you be surprised
|
if
|
it snowed next July?
|
What would you do
|
if
|
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.
Exercise on IF Clause Type 2 .
Exercise on IF Clause Type 2 .
Third
Conditional: no possibility
The first conditional and second conditionals talk
about the future. With the third
conditional we talk about the past. We talk about a condition
in the past that did not happen. That is why there is no
possibility for this condition. The third conditional is also like a dream, but
with no possibility of the dream coming true.
Last week you bought a lottery ticket. But you did not
win. :-(
|
condition
|
result
|
|
Past Perfect
|
WOULD HAVE + Past Participle
|
If
|
I had won the lottery
|
I would have bought a car.
|
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
|
result
|
|
past perfect
|
WOULD HAVE + past participle
|
If
|
I had seen Mary
|
I would have told her.
|
If
|
|
I would have invited her.
|
If
|
they had not passed their exam
|
their teacher would have been sad.
|
If
|
it had rained yesterday
|
would you have stayed at home?
|
If
|
it had rained yesterday
|
what would you have done?
|
result
|
IF
|
condition
|
WOULD HAVE + past participle
|
|
past perfect
|
I would have told Mary
|
if
|
I had seen her.
|
I would have invited
|
if
|
she had been free yesterday.
|
Their teacher would have been sad
|
if
|
they had not passed their exam.
|
Would you have stayed at home
|
if
|
it had rained yesterday?
|
What would you have done
|
if
|
it had rained yesterday?
|
Exercise on IF Clause Type 3 .
Exercise on IF Clause Type 3 .
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