191 likes | 567 Views
Conditionals I, II, and III. (A Review). IF and THEN Clauses. Conditional sentences have at least two clauses: IF clauses and THEN clauses. Examples: If I go into town tomorrow, then I will see a movie. If he spoke Chinese, then he would work as a guide in China.
E N D
Conditionals I, II, and III (A Review)
IF and THEN Clauses • Conditional sentences have at least two clauses: IF clauses and THEN clauses. • Examples: If I go into town tomorrow, then I will see a movie. If he spoke Chinese, then he would work as a guide in China. If they had been faster, then they would have won the race.
IF Clauses (the condition) • IF clauses present the condition. • Examples: If I go into town tomorrow… If he spoke Chinese… If they had been faster…
THEN Clauses (the results) • THEN clauses present the results. • Examples: … then I will see a movie. …. then he would work as a guide in China. … then they would have won the race.
IF and THEN Clauses • The word “then” is optional, but the clause is still the result of the condition. So it is a “THEN” clause, without the word “then.” • There are special rules for leaving out the word “if”. We will learn them later.
Remember: • The four words that NEVER (well, almost never) appear in the IF clause are: will, won’t, would, wouldn’t • Example: If we will see it, we will be angry.
Conditional I (present/future – possible) • When something is possible now or in the future • Form: If (present) then will V. • Example: If she studies, she will pass the geography test. (It is possible !!)
Unless • Unless = if not • Example: If we don’tfinish soon, we will miss the train. Unless we finish soon, we will miss the train.
Temporals • Temporals are time expressions. (Examples: before, until, after, by the time, etc.) • When they refer to the future, they are like Conditional I: Temporal (present), will V. • Examples: Untilhe arrives, I will read a book. They will make a cake before they go.
Conditional II(present/future – impossible) • When something is NOT possible now, or in the future. • Form: If (past) then would V. • Example: If he spoke Chinese, he would work as a guide in China. (Fact: He doesn’t speak Chinese, so it’s impossible.) The Great Wall of China With permission from www.adcsoft.com/bjigsawpictures.html
Special Rules for Conditional II • “To be” is always “were” Example: If he were here, he would do it. (Fact: He’s not here, so it’s impossible.) • You can drop the “if” by moving the “were” to the front. Example: Were he here, he would do it.
wish+ (past) • Unlike a hope (which is possible), a wish usually will not come true. In general, you wish for a miracle, something that is impossible. • Examples: I wish I were in Costa Rica. (I’m not there.) He wishes he spoke Chinese. (He doesn’t.)
would rather • “Would rather” is like Conditional II, wishing for something that is probably impossible. • Form: Subject 1 would rather subject 2 (past). Example: I would rather he came right now. (Fact: He probably won’t.) • would rather = ‘d rather Example: I’d rather he came right now.
Conditional III(past – impossible) • “Making believe” about the past, assuming something that wasn’t true • Form: If Past perfect, then would + present perfect. • Example: If we had studied, we would have passed the exam. (Fact: We didn’t study and we didn’t pass the exam.)
Where does the “not” go? • If the girl hadnot looked both ways when she crossed the street, a car would have hit her. (Fact: She did look both ways, so a car did not hit her.) • If the boys had practiced more, they would not have lost the game. (Fact: They did not practice enough, so they lost the game.)
Special Rules for Conditional III • You can drop the “if” by moving the “had” to the front. • Example: If he hadbeen there, we would have done it. Had he been there, we would have done it. • Be careful !! Although you are starting with a “little verb”, this is not a question !!
Good Luck !!Just remember to ask yourself: • Is the situation possible or impossible? • Is the situation in the past or in the present/future?
Remember !! The four words that NEVER (well, almost never) appear in the IF clause are: will, won’t, would, wouldn’t