miércoles, 30 de marzo de 2011

CONDITIONALS

ZERO CONDITIONALS:

0 Conditional – is used for scientific facts or general truths. ‘If’ can be substituted for ‘when’.

‘If you boil water to 100°C, it boils.’
‘When you boil water to 100°C, it boils



http://www.abcteach.com/free/0_conditionalb_chart.pdf

http://www.headsupenglish.com/skillbuilders/grammar/conditionalszeroivan.pdf

http://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/support-files/conditionals_zero_form.pdf

http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/flatmates/episode98/fm_languagepoint_070619.pdf

http://www.englishbanana.com/zero-conditional-bgb90.pdf

http://www.autoenglish.org/gr.zero.pdf

FIRST CONDITIONALS:

1st Conditional – is used with ‘will/can + base verb’ for a probable future result.

‘If you study hard, your English will improve.’
'If I get enough sleep, I will feel better.’

http://www.unrestrictedarea.com/esl/First%20Conditional.pdf

http://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/support-files/first_conditional_form.pdf

http://www.pearsonlongman.com/snapshot/pdfs/practice_first_conditional.pdf

http://www.bartanus.cz/Ke%20stazeni/gramatika/Conditionals%20and%20Wish%201.pdf

http://www.englishbanana.com/first-conditional-bgb62.pdf

http://learnwithsofa.com/grammar/ilc4/first_conditional.pdf

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/flatmates/episode24/languagepoint.pdf

http://www.pearsonlongman.com/totalenglish/pdfs/downloads/pre-intermediate/preint_unit07_grammar01.pdf

http://www.autoenglish.org/tenses/gr.con1.pdf

http://www.usingenglish.com/files/pdf/christmas-superstitions-1st-conditional.pdf

http://www.hkep.com/_dqtest/proof/Special/9789629489861s.pdf

http://ies1libertas.edu.gva.es/departamentos/ingles/PDFs/cuarto/efirstc4e1.pdf


SECOND CONDITIONALS:

2nd Conditional – uses the ‘simple past’ with ‘modal + base verb’ for imagined, impossible or unreal future situations.

‘If I won the lottery, I would buy a house
'If you met Sean Connery what would you ask him?’



http://www.autoenglish.org/tenses/gr.con2.pdf

http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/grammarchallenge/pdfs/gc_38_2nd_conditional_quizzes.pdf

http://www.learnenglishfeelgood.com/verbs-second-conditional1.pdf

http://spol.unica.it/didattica/Giordano/Lingua%20Inglese%201/Grammar/Second%20Conditional%20_1.pdf

http://learnwithsofa.com/grammar/ilc6/the_second_conditional.pdf

http://www.global-english.com/custom/courses/pdf/sample%20c%20_%20the%20second%20conditional.pdf

http://www.pearsonlongman.com/snapshot/pdfs/second_conditional.pdf




THIRD CONDITIONALS:



3rd Conditional – uses the ‘past perfect’ with ‘modal + have + past participle’. It is usually used to express a past regret about something which did not happen in the past.

‘If I had studied harder, I would have passed the exam.’
‘If I had been on time, I would have met her .’

http://www.autoenglish.org/tenses/gr.con3.pdf

http://www.headsupenglish.com/skillbuilders/grammar/thirdconditional.pdf

http://englishservice.cz/download/Third%20Conditional.pdf

http://www.csuchico.edu/~gthurgood/470/047_If%20only%20she.pdf

http://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/support-files/third_conditional_form.pdf

CONDITIONALS JUMBLE:

http://learnwithsofa.com/grammar/alc2/conditionals.pdf

http://teslden.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/conditional-wksht11.pdf

http://www.e-grammar.org/download/if-clauses.pdf

http://www.autoenglish.org/gr.conmixed.pdf

http://englishpage.iris-solutions.org/content/docs/exercises/grammar/conditional/005_009.pdf

http://bachiller.sabuco.com/ingles/eloy/2bach/conditio.pdf

http://www.iescarrus.com/dep/ing/material/4eso/conditional.pdf

http://profeblog.es/blog/teacher/files/2009/05/conditionals.pdf

http://www.skyline-english.com/PDFs/Grammar/4/U1Lesson3.pdf

http://www.se-savigliano.unito.it/programmi/materiali/Adami/CONDITIONAL%20SENTENCES.pdf

http://www.iesdamasoalonso.es/english/uploads/archives/Conditional-Sentences-IN.pdf

3 comentarios:

  1. Macías, a question about the exercice of 3rd conditional (the 1st link)(I forgot to ask you it in class)Is the abbreviation of nº11 correct? The answer says: ''If I'd known you were coming, I'd have baked a cake''. It wouldn't be I would've baked a cake?
    Thanks!

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  2. Este comentario ha sido eliminado por el autor.

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  3. I feel more comfortable with 'would've', it's easier for me.
    Thanks for the link and the answer :).
    Best regards.

    ResponderEliminar