Conditional Sentences
Conditional Sentences
iSLCollective.com
CONDITIONALS
iSLCollective.com
Real conditionals:
o Zero Conditional:
o If someone breaks a window, an alarm goes off.
o First Conditional:
o If I miss the bus tonight, I'll take a taxi instead.
Unreal conditionals:
o Second Conditional:
If I owned a car, I would drive to work.
o Third Conditional:
If I had studied harder, I would have passed the test.
o Mixed Conditional:
If I had finished my work yesterday, I wouldn't be
so stressed out today.
iSLCollective.com
ZERO CONDITIONAL
iSLCollective.com
Use of “If” (condition) vs “When” (time
clauses)
The word if implies that a situation happens less frequently,
and the word when implies it happens more frequently:
iSLCollective.com
FIRST CONDITIONAL
Whereas the zero conditional talks about real present situations,
the first conditional talks about real future possibilities.
iSLCollective.com
First Conditional: Real Future Possibilities
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.
iSLCollective.com
Other words besides “If”
In first conditional sentences, it is possible to use other
words instead of “if” or “unless”:
iSLCollective.com
Practice time!
Now choose the correct option for each verb:
1. I'm going to take a shower as soon as I get / will get home from
the gym
2. Unless I find/ will find my watch, I have / I'll have to buy a new
one.
3. If the surgery isn't / won’t be successful, he has / 'll have just six
months to live.
4. You have / You’ll have a great time if you go / you’ll go to Rio.
5. We are / We’ll be disappointed if nobody comes / will come to
our party on Friday.
6. If you forget / you’ll forget your wife's birthday next week, she is /
she’ll be upset.
7. I give / I’ll give him the documents when I see / I’ll see him later
today.
8. When I get / will get married, I have / I’m going to have a simple
wedding.
iSLCollective.com
SUMMARY: Real Conditionals
• Conditionals are sentences in which one thing depends on
another.
• Use the zero conditional for things that happen regularly in
daily life - "If you freeze water, it turns to ice." Both verbs
are in the present simple .
• The word if implies that a situation happens less frequently,
and the word when implies it happens more frequently.
• Use the first conditional for things that are real possibilities
in the future: "If it's sunny tomorrow, then we'll go to the
beach." Although both events are technically in the future,
we use the present simple in the condition, and will/going
to in the result.
iSLCollective.com
SUMMARY
iSLCollective.com
Unreal Conditionals
They are used to talk about imaginary, unlikely, or impossible
situations in the present and past:
• Second Conditional:
If I owned a car, I would drive to work.
(imagining things are different in the present)
• Third Conditional:
If I had studied harder, I would have passed last week’s test.
(imagining things were different in the past)
• Mixed Conditional:
If I had finished my work yesterday, I wouldn't be so stressed
out today.
(mix of times - imagining something different in the past having a
different result in the present)
iSLCollective.com
Imagining the Present were different
iSLCollective.com
Second conditional
Now we'll take those wishes one step further and imagine
the result; imagine what would happen if they were
currently true. This is the second conditional:
Example:
If I lived near the mountains, I would go hiking
every weekend.
If my boyfriend didn’t work so much, we'd go out
more often.
iSLCollective.com
Second Conditional
If I had a lot of money, I would buy a big house.
Condition Result
If I knew his number, I would (I’d) phone him.
if-clause: main clause:
PAST SIMPLE TENSE CONDITIONAL SIMPLE
would / might / could + infinitive
I wish I …
I wish I had a lot of money to buy a
house.
iSLCollective.com
SECOND CONDITIONAL
I wish…
I wish I knew his number…
iSLCollective.com
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
I ___________ had
(call) him if I ___________ (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?
__________
iSLCollective.com
FIRST v. SECOND CONDITIONAL
iSLCollective.com
THIRD CONDITIONAL
Now we'll take those wishes one step further – imagining the result, in
the past, if that past situation had been different:
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.
iSLCollective.com
THIRD CONDITIONAL
iSLCollective.com
THIRD CONDITIONAL
iSLCollective.com
SECOND v. THIRD CONDITIONAL
iSLCollective.com
A bit of rephrasing…
a) I’m not rich so I don’t travel a lot. => If I…
If I were rich, I’d travel a lot.
b) She didn’t wake up early, so she missed the train. =>
If she the train.
If she had woken up earlier, she wouldn’t have missed the train.
c) I didn’t call you because I came back really late. =>
I earlier.
I would have called you if I had come back earlier.
d) He doesn’t have a job, that’s why he can’t buy a house. =>
If he …
If he had a job, he would be able to buy a house.
iSLCollective.com
e) He had that terrible accident because he wasn’t careful. =>
If he accident.
If he had been careful, he wouldn’t have had that terrible accident.
e) I didn’t work hard, so I didn’t pass the exam. =>
If I the exam.
If I had worked hard, I would have passed the exam.
f) They can’t live in this country because they can’t find a job here.
=>They a job here.
They’d live in this country if they found a job here.
g) Visiting Israel won’t be possible without a visa. =>
Unless you Israel.
Unless you have a visa, you won’t be able to visit Israel / it will be
impossible to visit Israel. iSLCollective.com
ALL CONDITIONALS
1. If it rains today, you will get wet (you don’t have an umbrella).
This is still possible to happen.
iSLCollective.com
WISH – IF ONLY…
“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.
iSLCollective.com
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.
iSLCollective.com
iSLCollective.com
Thanks to Shayna Oliveira (Advance Grammar Course
www.espressoenglish.net). Her book has been a great help!
iSLCollective.com