Conditionals (If Clauses)
Conditionals (If Clauses)
Conditional sentences have two parts or clauses that give a condition in the dependent clause
and a result in the independent clause. The condition clause usually contains an if statement.
There are several different
forms of conditional sentences that allow the writer to express various meanings using different
tenses.
The zero conditional uses the present tense in both clauses and is used to talk about something
that is always
or generally true. The present tense signifies that these actions are both possible and typical.
FIRST CONDITIONAL
The first conditional uses the present tense in the if clause and the future tense in the result
clause. This form is
SECOND CONDITIONAL
The second conditional uses the past tense in the if clause and a modal and base verb in the
result clause. This
form is used to talk about a hypothetical situation that cannot happen or is unlikely to happen.
THIRD CONDITIONAL
The third conditional uses the past perfect in the if clause and a modal and present perfect in
the result clause.
This form is used to talk about a hypothetical situation in the past that did not happen – typically
with an
outcome that did not happen and is perhaps the opposite of what did happen.
Example 1: If it had rained last week, the plants would not have died.
MIXED CONDITIONAL
Mixed conditionals combine the second and third conditionals to present both an unreal
condition either in the
past or the present and an unreal result either in the past or the present.
The first form presents an unreal condition in the past that changes an unreal outcome in the
present (the past
Example 2: If it had rained last week, the plants would be alive now.
The second form presents an unreal condition in the present that changes an unreal outcome in
the past (the
present changes the past).
There are a few aspects of conditionals that should be noted in order to make their use easier
and clearer.
• Conditionals can be categorized as real and unreal. You can think of this as meaning possible
or
impossible. Zero and first conditionals are possible as they deal with things that are generally
true or
that could be true in the future. Second, third, and mixed conditionals are impossible because
they are
either hypothetical or concerned with events in the past that we cannot change.
• In the second conditional, the simple past is used in the condition clause. If the be verb is
being used, it
is typical to use were in more formal contexts. If you’re speaking informally though, was is more
usual.
Example 2: If you were nicer, you could have had more friends when you were younger.