A conditional clause may be
introduced by the subordinating conjunction
if or another conjunction, such as unless or in case of.
See also:
Examples
and Observations:
- "If you want a friend in Washington, get a
dog."
(Harry Truman)
- "If we had no winter, the spring would not
be so pleasant; if we did not sometimes taste of adversity,
prosperity would not be so welcome."
(Anne Bradstreet, "Meditations Divine and Moral")
- "If I had only known, I would have been a
locksmith."
(Albert Einstein)
- "Conditions deal with imagined situations:
some are possible, some are unlikely, some are impossible. The
speaker/writer imagines that something can or cannot happen or have
happened, and then compares that situation with possible consequences or
outcomes, or offers further logical conclusions about the situation."
(R. Carter, Cambridge Grammar of English. Cambridge Univ. Press, 2006)
- There are six main types of conditional sentence:
- For example, the equilibrium between liquid and vapor
is upset if the temperature is increased.
(General rule, or law of nature: it always happens.)
- If you start thinking about this game, it will drive you crazy.
(Open future condition: it may or may not happen.)
- But if you really wanted to be on Malibu Beach,
you'd be there.
(Unlikely future condition: it probably won't happen.)
- If I were you, I would go to the conference center itself and ask to
see someone in security.
(Impossible future condition: it could never happen.)
- "I would have resigned if they had made the
decision themselves," she said.
(Impossible past condition: it didn't happen.)
- If he had been working for three days and three nights then it was in the suit he was wearing now.
(Unknown past condition: we don't know the facts.)
(John
Seely, Grammar for Teachers. Oxpecker, 2007
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