CONDITIONAL SENTENCES “IF CLAUSE”
1.
If Clause
Type 1
Form
if + Simple
Present, will-Future
-
Example: If I find her address, I will
send her an invitation.
The main clause can
also be at the beginning of the sentence. In this case, don't use a comma.
-
Example: I will send her an invitation
if I find her address.
-
Example: If I don’t see him this
afternoon, I will phone him in the evening.
Use
Conditional
Sentences Type I refer to the future. An action in the future will only happen
if a certain condition is fulfilled by that time. We don't know for sure
whether the condition actually will be fulfilled or not, but the conditions
seems rather realistic – so we think it is likely to happen.
-
Example: If I find her address, I’ll
send her an invitation.
I want to send an
invitation to a friend. I just have to find her address. I am quite sure,
however, that I will find it.
-
Example: If John has the money, he will
buy a Ferrari.
I know John very
well and I know that he earns a lot of money and that he loves Ferraris. So, I
think it is very likely that sooner or later he will have the money to buy a
Ferrari.
EXERCISE:
https://www.ego4u.com/en/cram-up/grammar/conditional-sentences/type-1/exercises
2.
If Clause Type 2
Form
if + Simple Past, main
clause with Conditional I (= would + Infinitive)
-
Example: If I
found her address, I would send her an invitation.
The main clause can also be
at the beginning of the sentence. In this case, don't use a comma.
-
Example: I
would send her an invitation if I found her address.
-
Example: If I
had a lot of money, I wouldn’t stay here.
Were instead of Was
In IF Clauses Type II, we
usually use ‚were‘ – even if the pronoun is I, he, she or it –.
-
Example: If
I were you,
I would not do this.
Use
Conditional Sentences Type II
refer to situations in the present. An action could happen if the present
situation were different. I don't really expect the situation to change,
however. I just imagine „what
would happen if …“
-
Example: If I
found her address, I would send her an invitation.
I would like to send an
invitation to a friend. I have looked everywhere for her address, but I cannot
find it. So now I think it is rather unlikely that I will eventually find her
address.
-
Example: If
John had the money, he would buy a Ferrari.
I know John very well and I
know that he doesn't have much money, but he loves Ferraris. He would like to
own a Ferrari (in his dreams). But I think it is very unlikely that he will
have the money to buy one in the near future.
EXERCISE
https://www.ego4u.com/en/cram-up/grammar/conditional-sentences/type-2/exercises
3.
If Clause Type 3
Form
if + Past Perfect, main
clause with Conditional II
-
Example: If I had found her address, I would have sent her an invitation.
The main clause can also be
at the beginning of the sentence. In this case, don't use a comma.
-
Example: I would have sent her an invitation if I had found her address.
-
Example: If I hadn’t studied, I wouldn’t have passed my exams.
Use
Conditional Sentences Type
III refer to situations in the past. An action could have happened in the past
if a certain condition had been fulfilled. Things were different then, however.
We just imagine, what would have happened if the situation had been fulfilled.
-
Example: If I had found her address, I would have sent her an invitation.
Sometime in the past, I
wanted to send an invitation to a friend. I didn't find her address, however.
So, in the end I didn't send her an invitation.
-
Example: If John had had the money, he would have bought a Ferrari.
I knew John very well and I know that he never had much money, but he loved Ferraris. He would have loved to own a Ferrari, but he never had the money to buy one.
EXERCISE
https://www.ego4u.com/en/cram-up/grammar/conditional-sentences/type-3/exercises
4. If Clause
Type “0” / Zero Conditional
Use:
for certainty, facts, habits, general truth
If you heat ice, it melts.
We
use the so-called zero
conditional when the result of the condition is always
true, like a scientific fact.
Take
some ice. Put it in a saucepan. Heat the saucepan. What happens? The ice melts
(it becomes water). You would be surprised if it did not.
if |
condition |
Result |
|
Present
Simple |
Present
Simple |
If |
you heat
ice, |
it melts. |
Notice
that we are thinking about a result that is always true for this condition. The
result of the condition is an absolute certainty. We are not thinking about the
future or the past, or even the present. We are thinking about a simple fact.
We use the Present
Simple tense to talk about the condition. We also use
the Present Simple tense
to talk about the result. The important thing about the zero conditional is
that the condition
always has the same result.
Look
at these example sentences:
if |
Condition |
result |
|
Present
Simple |
Present
Simple |
If |
I miss the
8 o'clock bus, |
I am late
for work. |
If |
I
am late for work, |
my
boss gets angry. |
If |
people
don't eat, |
they get
hungry. |
If |
you
heat ice, |
does
it melt? |
Exercise “The Cat and the Mouse” –
Part 1
1.
The mouse, however, went to the baker. “The cat (give / only) me
back my tail if I fetch her some milk. And the cow (give / not) me
milk if I don't get her hay. And the farmer will only give me hay if the
butcher (have) some meat for him. And the
butcher will not give me meat if you (bake / not) him
a bread.”
2.
And the baker said, “Well, I (give) you
bread if you promise never to steal my corn or meal.”
3.
The mouse promised not to steal, and so the baker gave the mouse bread,
the mouse gave the butcher bread. The butcher gave the mouse meat, the mouse
gave the farmer meat. The farmer gave the mouse hay, the mouse gave the cow
hay. The cow gave the mouse milk, the mouse gave the cat milk. And the cat gave
the mouse her tail back.
4.
But imagine what would have happened otherwise:
5.
If the mouse (promised / not) never to steal corn or
meal, the baker (not/give) the mouse bread.
6.
If the baker (not / give) the mouse bread, the
butcher (refuse) to give her meat for the
farmer.
7.
If the butcher (refuse) her
any meat, the farmer (not / be) willing
to give the mouse hay.
8.
If the farmer (not / be) willing
to give the mouse hay, the mouse (not / receive) milk
from the cow.
9.
If the mouse (not / receive) milk from the cow,
she (not / get) back her tail.
Sources: EnglishClub.com