Conditional sentences are used to describe situations where one event depends on another. They usually have two parts:
- If clause β the condition
- Main clause β the result
Example: If it rains (condition), I will stay home (result).
Zero Conditional (Facts and Truths)
Use: To express universal truths, scientific facts, or things that always happen.
Structure: If + Present Simple, Present Simple
- If you heat water, it boils.
- If it rains, the grass gets wet.
- If people donβt sleep, they feel tired.
First Conditional (Real Possibility)
Use: For real or likely situations in the future.
Structure: If + Present Simple, will + base verb
- If I study, I will pass the exam.
- If it rains, we will stay home.
- If she hurries, she will catch the bus.
Second Conditional (Unreal or Imaginary Present/Future)
Use: For imaginary or unlikely situations in the present or future.
Structure: If + Past Simple, would + base verb
- If I had a car, I would drive to work.
- If he were rich, he would travel the world.
- If they knew the answer, they would tell us.
Third Conditional (Unreal Past)
Use: To express regret or imagine a different past result.
Structure: If + Past Perfect, would have + V3
- If I had studied, I would have passed the test.
- If she had left earlier, she would have caught the train.
- If they had called me, I would have helped them.
Mixed conditionals are used when the time in the βifβ clause and the main clause are different. They show how a past event can affect the present, or how a present situation could have changed the past.
Past Condition β Present Result
Structure: If + Past Perfect, would + base verb
- If I had studied medicine, I would be a doctor now.
- If she had gone abroad, she would live there today.
Present Condition β Past Result
Structure: If + Past Simple, would have + V3
- If I were smarter, I would have chosen better.
- If he knew the truth, he would have acted differently.
- βIfβ can often be replaced by when, unless, as long as, provided that.
- βWereβ is used for all subjects in formal English β for example, βIf I were you.β
- Do not use βwillβ in the βifβ clause; it is only used in the main clause.
- Conditionals can be seen as combinations of time and possibility.
- Zero Conditional: Real truth β (If + Present, Present)
- First Conditional: Real future β (If + Present, will + V1)
- Second Conditional: Unreal now/future β (If + Past, would + V1)
- Third Conditional: Unreal past β (If + Past Perfect, would have + V3)
After reading this guide, you can confidently identify, use, and combine conditional sentences in any situation.
