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CONDITIONAL SENTENCES AND WISHES Chapter 20 OVERVIEW OF BASIC VERB FORM USED IN CONDITIONAL SENTENCES Situation If-Clause Result Clause Examples True in the Present or Future Simple present Will + simple form If I have enough time, I watch TV every evening. If I have enough time, I will watch TV later on tonight. Untrue in the Present or Future Simple past Would + simple form If I had enough time, I would watch TV (now or in the future). Untrue in the Past Past perfect Would have + past participle If I had enough time, I would have watched TV yesterday. COMPLETE THE SENTENCES WITH THE VERBS IN PARENTHESES • I usually send my parents an email every week. That is a true fact. In other words: • If I (have) ________________ enough time, I (send) ____________ my parents an email every week. • I may have enough time to send my parents an email later tonight. I want to send them an email tonight. Both of those things are true. In other words: • If I (have)___________enough time, I (send) ___________ my parents an email later tonight. • I don’t have enough time right now, so I won’t send my parents an email. I’ll try to do it later. I want to email them, but the truth is that I just don’t have enough time right now. In other words: • If I (have) _________ enough time right now, I (send) ____________ my parents an email. • I won’t have enough time tonight, so I won’t send my parents an email. I’ll try to do it tomorrow. I want to email them, but the truth is I just won’t have enough time. In other words: • If I (have) __________ enough time later tonight, I (send) ____________my parents an email. • I wanted to send my parents an email last night, but I didn’t have enough time. In other words: • If I (have) ______________ enough time, I (send) _________________ my parents an email last night. TRUE IN THE PRESENT OR FUTURE • In conditional sentences that express true, factual ideas in the present or future, the simple present (NOT the simple future) is used in the IF-clause. • The result clause (THEN-clause) has various possible forms. • SIMPLE PRESENT = expresses a habitual activity or situation • If I don’t eat breakfast, I always get hungry during class. • SIMPLE PRESENT OR SIMPLE FUTURE = expresses an established, predictable fact or general truth • Water freezes/will freeze if the temperature reaches 32 degrees F/0 degrees C. • SIMPLE FUTURE = expresses a particular activity or situation in the future • If I don’t eat breakfast tomorrow morning, I will get hungry during class. • MODALS and IMPERATIVE VERBS can also be used to express other outcomes • • • • • If it rains, we should stay home. If it rains, I might decide to stay home. If it rains, we can’t go. If it rains, we’re going to stay home. If anyone calls, please take a message. TRUE IN THE PRESENT OR FUTURE • Sometimes SHOULD is used in an IF-clause. • It indicates a little more uncertainty than the use of the simple present, but basically the meaning is the same whether SHOULD is used or not. • If anyone calls, please take a message. • If anyone should call, please take a message. CHOOSE THE CORRECT VERB (BOTH ANSWERS MAY BE CORRECT) • If I find out the answer, I will let / let you know. • If I have extra time, I tutor / am going to tutor students in math. • If it snows, the roads are / will be closed. • If you run up a hill, your heart beats / will beat faster. • If it should rain tomorrow, we might change / will change our plans. • If my cell phone battery goes dead, I will recharge / would recharge it. LISTENING PRACTICE • Complete Exercise 6, p. 418 UNTRUE (CONTRARY TO FACT) IN THE PRESENT OR FUTURE • If-Clause = Simple Past • Then Clause = Would + Simple Form • If I taught this class, I wouldn’t give tests. • If they were here right now, they would help us. • If I were you, I would accept their invitation. • Note: Were is used for both singular and plural subjects. Was (with I/he/she/it) is sometimes used in informal speech (If I was you…), but this is not acceptable in writing. WOULD VS. COULD • If I had enough money, I would buy a car. • The speaker wants a car, but doesn’t have enough money. • WOULD expresses desired or predictable results. • If I had enough money, I could buy a car. • The speaker is expressing one possible result. • COULD expresses possible options PRACTICE • Complete Exercises 8 and 10, p. 419-420 UNTRUE (CONTRARY TO FACT) IN THE PAST • Past Perfect If-Clause – Would Have + Past Participle Result Clause: • If you had told me about the problem, I would have helped you. • Meaning: In truth, you did NOT tell me about it, so I did NOT help you. • If they had studied, they would have passed the exam. • Meaning: In truth, they did not study, so they failed the exam. • If I hadn’t slipped on the stairs, I wouldn’t have broken my arm. • Meaning: In truth, I slipped on the stairs, so I DID break my arm. UNTRUE (CONTRARY TO FACT) IN THE PAST • Note: when speaking, the auxiliary verbs (have/has) are often reduced • (Sometimes in very informal speech they may be dropped/not pronounced all together): • If you’d told me, I would’ve helped you. • OR • If you’d told me, I-duv helped you. • Sometimes the ‘d on you is not pronounced either UNTRUE (CONTRARY TO FACT) IN THE PAST • Would VS. Could • Would expressed a desired or predictable result: • If I had had enough money, I would have bought a car. • Buying the car is what I wanted to do if I had the money/would have been the preferred thing for me to do with the money • Could expresses a possible option: • If I had had enough money, I could have bought a car. • Buying the car is one possible thing I could have done with the money DECIDE IF EACH SENTENCE IS TRUE OR UNTRUE • If the weather is warm, we’ll eat outdoors. • If the weather were warm, we would eat outdoors. • If the weather had been warm, we would have eaten outdoors. • If I had more money, I would work less. • If I had more money, I would have worked less. • If I take time off from work, I feel more relaxed. • If I hadn’t had to work, I could have seen you. • If I didn’t have to work, I could see you. LISTENING PRACTICE • Complete Exercises 20 (p. 424) and 22 (p. 426) PRACTICE • Complete Exercises 15, 16, 17, 21, and 23 p. 422-426 USING PROGRESSIVE VERB FORMS IN CONDITIONAL SENTENCES • Even in conditional sentences, progressive verb forms are used in progressive situations (chart 1-2 on p. 3 reviews when to use progressive forms) • True: It is raining right now, so I will not go for a walk. • Conditional: If it were raining right now, I would go for a walk. • True: It was raining yesterday afternoon, so I did not go for a walk. • Conditional: If it had not been raining, I would have gone for a walk. PRACTICE • Complete Exercise 27, p 428 USING “MIXED TIME” IN CONDITIONAL SENTENCES • Frequently the time in the if-clause and the result clause are different: • One clause may be in the present and the other in the past. • The past and present times are mixed in these sentences. • True: I did not eat breakfast several hours ago, so I am hungry now. • Did not eat = past + am hungry = present • Conditional: If I had eaten breakfast several hours ago, I would not be hungry now. • Had eaten = past untrue conditional + would not be hungry = present untrue conditional USING “MIXED TIME” IN CONDITIONAL SENTENCES • Another Example: • He is not a good student. He did not study for the test yesterday. • Is not = present + did not study = past • If he were a good student, he would have studied for the test yesterday. • Were = present untrue conditional + would have studied = past untrue conditional CHANGE EACH STATEMENT TO A CONDITIONAL SENTENCE • Example: • I’m hungry now because I didn’t eat dinner. • Hungry = present / didn’t eat = past • If I’d eaten dinner, I wouldn’t be hungry now. • The room is full of flies because you left the door open. • You are tired this morning because you didn’t go to bed early enough last night. • I didn’t finish my report yesterday, so I can’t begin a new project today. • I’m not you, so I didn’t tell him the truth. • I don’t know anything about plumbing, so I didn’t fix the leak in the sink myself. • Anita got sick because she didn’t follow the doctor’s orders. OMITTING IF • With were and had (past perfect) sometimes IF is omitted and the subject and verb are inverted (they swap places): • If I were you, I wouldn’t do that. • Were I you, I wouldn’t do that. • If I had known, I would have told you. • Had I known, I would have told you. • If anyone should call, please take a message. • Should anyone call, please take a message OMITTING IF • IF can also be omitted with should, but in these cases Should gets moved in front of the S+V: • If anyone should call, please take a message. • Should anyone call, please take a message PRACTICE • Complete Exercise 31, p. 429 IMPLIED CONDITIONS • Often, the IF-clause is implied, not stated. • Usually the implied IF-clause comes after the result • The result clause still uses conditional verbs • Examples: • If I hadn’t had to study, I would have gone with you. • I would have gone with you, but I had to study. • If you hadn’t helped me, I never would have succeeded. • I never would have succeeded without your help. IMPLIED CONDITIONS • Conditional verbs are frequently used following otherwise: • If she had not run, she would have missed the bus. • She ran; otherwise, she would have missed the bus. • If she had not studied hard for the test, she would not have passed it. • She studied hard for the test; otherwise, she would not have passed it. CHANGE THE IMPLIED CONDITIONS TO SENTENCES INCLUDING AN IF-CLAUSE • Example: • I would have visited you, but I didn’t know that you were at home. • I would have visited you if I had know you were at home. • OR • If I had known you were at home, I would have visited you. • Ift wouldn’t have been a good meeting without Rosa. • I would have answered the phone, but I didn’t hear it ring. • I couldn’t have finished the work without your help. • I would have gone to Nepal last summer, but I didn’t have enough money. • I stepped on the brakes. Otherwise, I would have hit the child on the bicycle. • Olga turned down the volume on the speakers. Otherwise, the neighbors probably would have called to complain about the noise. • Tarek would have finished his education, but he had to quit school and find a job in order to support his family. PRACTICE • Complete Exercise 36, p. 431-432 • Complete Exercise 37, p. 432-433 – come up with one completion for each. VERB FORMS FOLLOWING WISH • Wish is used when the speaker wants reality to be different (for the situation to be the opposite of what it actually is) • I wish + noun clause (see chart 12-5 p. 253 to review noun clauses) • Past verb forms, similar to those in conditional sentences, are used in the noun clause. VERB FORMS FOLLOWING WISH • A wish about the future: • True: She will not tell me. • Wish: I wish (that) she would tell me. • Would, the past tense of will, is used to make a wish about the future. • True: He isn’t going to be here. • Wish: I wish (that) he were going to be here. • Were going to be (the past tense of is going to be), is used to make a wish about the future. • Note that as with untrue present/future conditionals, WERE is used regardless of whether the subject is singular or plural • True: She can’t come tomorrow. • Wish: I wish (that) she could come tomorrow. VERB FORMS FOLLOWING WISH • Wishes about the present: • True: I don’t know French. • Wish: I wish I knew French. • The simple past (knew) is used to make a wish about the present. • True: It is raining right now. • I wish it weren’t raining right now. • Weren’t raining (past tense for is raining) is used to make a wish about the present. • I can’t speak Japanese. • I wish I could speak Japanese. VERB FORMS FOLLOWING WISH • Wishes about the past: • Truth: John didn’t come. • Wish: I wish John had come. • The past perfect (had come) is used to make a wish about the past. • Truth: Mary couldn’t come. • Wish: I wish Mary could have come. PRACTICE • Complete Exercises 40 and 42, p. 434-435 USING WOULD TO MAKE WISHES ABOUT THE FUTURE • Would is usually used to indicate that the speaker wants something to happen or wants someone else to do something in the future. • The wish may or may not come true. • It is raining. I wish it would stop. • Meaning: I want it to stop raining. • I’m expecting a call. I wish the phone would ring. • Meaning: I want the phone to ring. USING WOULD TO MAKE WISHES ABOUT THE FUTURE • I wish you would….. If often used to make a request: • It’s going to be a good party. I wish you would come. • Meaning: I want you to come to the party/I’m asking you to come to the party. • We’re going to be late. I wish you would hurry up. • Meaning: I’m asking you to please be faster. LISTENING PRACTICE • Complete Exercise 45, p. 436-437 PRACTICE • Complete Exercise 44, p. 436 • Complete chapter review handout.