Topic Explanation and Use
Core idea
Conditionals become easier when you match the time and the result carefully.
Conditionals connect a situation with its result. The verb forms show whether the situation is real, likely, imagined, or impossible in the past.
Use conditionals to explain consequences clearly. Strong conditional writing depends on matching the condition and result to the same timeline and logic.
At A2 level, keep sentences short and clear first. Add extra words only when they help meaning.
Use it here
- Decide first whether the meaning is real, likely, unreal, or impossible in the past.
- Match the verb forms in both halves of the sentence.
- Do not put will in a normal if-clause unless the structure has a special meaning.
Watch it work
Remember this
- Decide whether the situation is real, likely, unreal, or impossible in the past.
- Match the if-clause tense to the correct result-clause form.
- Use would, could, or might only when the logic is unreal or hypothetical.
- Do not add will inside a standard if-clause.
- Read both halves together to make sure timeline and probability match.
Real-World Examples with Conditional Sentences: First
Example 1
Too weakIf governments invest in transit, traffic reduced quickly.
BetterIf governments invest in transit, traffic will reduce quickly.
This correction matches the intended meaning and keeps Conditional Sentences natural.
Example 2
Too weakIf I knew the answer, I will tell you now.
BetterIf I knew the answer, I would tell you now.
This version sounds more natural because Conditional Sentences fits the sentence clearly.
Common Errors with Conditional Sentences: First
Common problem 1
mixing first and second conditional forms in one sentence
WeakIf governments invest in transit, traffic reduced quickly.
StrongIf governments invest in transit, traffic will reduce quickly.
Fix: match the if-clause tense and result clause form correctly
Common problem 2
putting will inside a standard if-clause
WeakIf students will revise regularly, they will improve faster.
StrongIf students revise regularly, they will improve faster.
Fix: use the present form in the if-clause for likely future results
Common problem 3
mixing unreal and real patterns without intention
WeakIf I studied harder, I will pass the exam.
StrongIf I studied harder, I would pass the exam.
Fix: keep the whole condition-result pair in the same logic pattern
Interactive Practice Lab
Practice
First notice the right form. Then build it yourself. Then fix it in a full sentence.
Score: 0/4
Read for meaning first. If the meaning changes, the grammar usually has to change too.
1. Quick pick
Choose the stronger sentence for Conditional Sentences.
2. Build it
Put this Conditional Sentences sentence in the correct order.
Tap a chunk to move it down. Tap it again to send it back.
3. Type the fix
Rewrite the sentence so Conditional Sentences is correct.
Fix this: If the policy had started earlier, results are better now.
4. Final sort
Mark each sentence as correct or needing a fix.
If students study consistently, they will improve their scores quickly.
If students study consistently, they would improve their scores quickly.
If I had enough money, I would travel this summer.
If I had enough money, I will travel this summer.
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