This
material is the third material that will be discussed ya, entitled conditional sentence. Conditional sentence is used for expressing our hope or expectation toward something. A sentence conditinal Consist of two parts: the "main clause" and "if clause". There are four types of conditional sentences in english: 1st, 2nd, 3rd conditional sentences and Conditional Sentence without "IF" (inversion). we discuss one by one yuk, hehe
Starting from the 1st Conditional Sentences
1. Form
In a Type 1 conditional sentence, the tense in the 'if'
clause is the simple present, and the tense in the main clause is the simple
future.
If Clause (If + simple present)
|
Main Clause (Simple future)
|
If it rains,
|
You will get wet
|
If you don’t hurry,
|
We will miss the train
|
If she goes to the river,
|
She will meet me.
|
2.Function
In these sentences, the time is the present or future
and the situation is real. They refer to a possible condition and
its probable result. They are based on facts, and they are used to make
statements about the real world, and about particular situations. We often use
such sentences to give warnings.
Example :
•
If you don't leave, I'll
call the police.
|
•
If I have time, I'll
finish that letter.
|
•
If you don't drop the
gun, I'll shoot!
|
•
If you drop
that glass, it will break.
|
•
What will you do
if you miss the plane?
|
•
Nobody will
notice if you make a mistake.
|
NOTE: We can use modals to express the degree of
certainty of the result:
• If
you drop that glass, it might break.
• I
may finish that letter if I have time.
2nd Conditional Sentences
2nd 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. (Contrary-fact). 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
|
Main Clause
|
If + simple past (V2)
|
would
+ V1
|
If clause
|
Main clause
|
If I had a
million dollars,
|
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
|
If clause
|
I would buy a big house
|
if I had a million dollars
|
Examples & Using of Conditional Sentences
Example :
|
Explanation:
|
If I were you, I would drive more carefully in the
rain.
|
I am not you — this is unreal.
|
If dogs had wings, they would be able to fly.
|
Dogs don't have wings — that's impossible.
|
If I were a doctor, I would check your health.
|
In the Fact – You’re not a doctor.
|
If I had enough money, I would go to Seoul.
|
In the Fact – You don’t have any money.
|
If I studied hard, I would pass the test
successfully.
|
In the fact- You don’t study hard, so you don’t pass
it successfully.
|
3rd
Conditional Sentences
3rd
conditional sentences is an
“impossible condition” , meaning it is contraty to the fact in the
past and there is no hope for the
situasion to occur because you were imagining something in the past. The structure of 3rd Conditional
Sentences like the other conditionals, a third conditional sentence
consists of two clauses, an “if” clause and a main clause:
If clause
|
Main Clause
|
if + subject + past perfect verb*
|
subject + would (OR could, OR might) have + past
participle
|
If clause
|
Main clause
|
If I had gone to surabaya last week,
|
I would
have met my grandparents for the last time.
|
*Note also that third conditional forms can
be contracted:
Full
Form : If I had
studied harder, I probably would have passed the exam.
Contracted Form :
If I'd studied harder, I probably would've passed the exam.
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
|
Explanation
|
If you had driven more
carefully, you would not have had an accident.
|
Criticism:
You had an accident because you didn't drive carefully enough.
|
If we had played a little
better, we could have won the game.
|
Regret:
We didn't play well, so we lost the game.
|
If you had saved your money,
you could have bought a computer.
|
Criticism:
You didn't save your money, so now you can't afford a computer.
|
If it had snowed, we could
have gone skiing.
|
Regret:
It didn't snow, so we couldn't go skiing.
|
It had
been much discussed,
hopefully can be
understood by all readers and well understood yaa, keep learning. :)
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