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2nd and 3rd Conditional

The document discusses the second conditional, which is used to talk about unreal situations in the present or future. It follows the structure of "if + past verb" for the if-clause and "subject + would + bare infinitive" for the main clause. Some examples are given like "If I were you, I would drive more carefully in the rain" to illustrate unreal present situations. The third conditional is also mentioned as used to talk about unreal past situations, following the structure of "if + past perfect" and "subject + modal + present perfect" in the two clauses.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
718 views4 pages

2nd and 3rd Conditional

The document discusses the second conditional, which is used to talk about unreal situations in the present or future. It follows the structure of "if + past verb" for the if-clause and "subject + would + bare infinitive" for the main clause. Some examples are given like "If I were you, I would drive more carefully in the rain" to illustrate unreal present situations. The third conditional is also mentioned as used to talk about unreal past situations, following the structure of "if + past perfect" and "subject + modal + present perfect" in the two clauses.

Uploaded by

Ming Zhou
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Second Conditional

The second conditional (also called conditional type 2) is a structure used for talking about unreal situations in the present or in the future. This page will explain how the second conditional is formed, and when to use it.

The structure of a second conditional sentence


Like a first conditional, a second conditional sentence consists of two clauses, an "if" clause and a main clause:

if clause
If I had a million dollars,

main clause
I would buy a big house.

If the "if" clause comes first, a comma is usually used. If the "if" clause comes second, there is no need for a comma:

main clause
I would buy a big house

if clause
if I had a million dollars.

We use different verb forms in each part of a second conditional:

if clause main clause

if + subject + verb (past form)* subject + would + verb (bare infinitive)

*Note that this "past" form is slightly different from usual in the case of the verb BE. Whatever the subject, the verb form is "were", not "was": If I were rich, I'd buy a big house.

Using the second conditional

The second conditional is used to talk about things which are unreal (not true or not possible) in the present or the future -- things which don't or won't happen:

Example
If I were you, I would drive more carefully in the rain. Paula would be sad if Jan left. If dogs had wings, they would be able to fly.

Explanation
I am not you -- this is unreal. Jan will not leave -- that's not going to happen. Dogs don't have wings -- that's impossible.

Third Conditional
The third conditional (also called conditional type 3) is a structure used for talking about unreal situations in the past. This page will explain how the third conditional is formed, and when to use it.

The structure of a third conditional sentence


Like the other conditionals, a third conditional sentence consists of two clauses, an "if" clause and a main clause:

if clause
If I had studied harder,

main clause
I would have passed the exam.

explanation
I failed the exam, because I didn't study hard enough.

If the "if" clause comes first, a comma is usually used. If the "if" clause comes second, there is no need for a comma:

main clause
I probably would have passed the exam

if clause
if I had studied harder.

We use different verb forms in each part of a third conditional:

if clause main clause

if + subject + verb (past perfect form)* subject + modal (would, could, might, etc) + verb (present perfect)

*The past perfect is formed with the auxiliary verb "had", and the past participle (or third form) of the verb.

Using the third conditional


The third conditional is used to talk about things which DID NOT HAPPEN in the past. If your native language does not have a similar construction, you may find this a little strange, but it can be very useful. It is often used to express criticism or regret:

Example
If you had driven more carefully, you would not have had an accident. If we had played a little better, we could have won the game. If you had saved your money, you could have bought a computer. If it had snowed, we could have gone skiing.

Explanation
Criticism: You had an accident because you didn't drive carefully enough. Regret: We didn't play well, so we lost the game. Criticism: You didn't save your money, so now you can't afford a computer. Regret: It didn't snow, so we couldn't go skiing.

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