Conditional Sentences - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Conditional Sentences

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Conditional Sentences The meaning of Conditional Sentences Factual Conditional Sentences Generic Factual Conditionals Relationships that are true and unchanging If ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conditional Sentences


1
Conditional Sentences
  • The meaning of Conditional Sentences

2
Conditionals
Future(predictive)
Imaginative(Subjunctive)
Factual
  • 1. Timeless
  • Generic
  • Habitual
  • Hypothetical
  • Present
  • Future
  • Counterfactual
  • Present
  • Past
  1. Strong condition and result
  2. Degrees of weakened condition or result
  • 2. Time-bound
  • Implicitinference
  • Explicitinference

3
Factual Conditional Sentences
  • Generic Factual Conditionals
  • Relationships that are true and unchanging
  • If oil is mixed with water, it floats.
  • If you boil water, it vaporizes.
  • Normally take a simple present tense in both
    clauses.
  • Especially frequent in scientific writing.

4
Factual Conditional Sentences
  • Habitual Factual Conditionals
  • Relationship based on habit
  • Past or present relationships that are habitually
    true.
  • If I wash the dishes, Sally dries them.
  • If Nancy said, Jump! Bob jumped.
  • Both clauses usually have the same tense
  • Frequent in conversation.

5
Factual Conditional Sentences
  • Implicit inference conditionals
  • Specific time-bound relationships.
  • Much wider range of verb tenses.
  • If smog can be licked in L.A., it can be licked
    anywhere.
  • If the radicals havent made the government more
    responsive, they have wasted their time.
  • If there was a happy man in the world that night,
    it was John Tunney.
  • Both clauses usually have the same tense
  • When(ever) cannot substitute for if.

6
Factual Conditional Sentences
  • Explicit inference conditionals
  • Specific time-bound relationships.
  • Marked with modals.
  • If he was there, he must have seen the painting.
  • Usually makes use of must or should.
  • When(ever) cannot substitute for if.

7
Future Conditional Sentences
  • Strong Condition or Result
  • Future plans or contingencies
  • Normal pattern is simple present tense in the if
    clause and some explicit indication of future
    time in the result clause.
  • If it rains, Ill stay home.
  • If you finish your vegetables, Im going to buy
    you an ice cream cone.
  • If Steve comes to class, he will get the answers
    to the quiz.

8
Future Conditional Sentences
  • Degrees of Weakened Conditional or Result
  • Prediction scale Result Clause
  • will, be going to certain (strong result)
  • should probable
  • may possible (stronger than might)
  • might possible (weaker than may)
  • To weaken the condition clause
  • should happens to should happen to

9
Imaginative Conditional Sentences
  • Hypothetical Conditionals
  • Express what the speaker perceives to be unlikely
    yet possible events or states in the if clause
  • Can refer to the future as well as the present
  • If Joe had the time, he would go to Mexico.
    (Present)
  • If Joe were to have the time, he would go to
    Mexico. (Future)
  • The if clause is not strongly negated.

10
Imaginative Conditional Sentences
  • Hypothetical Conditionals
  • The negative quality of the if clause can be even
    further weakened so that the possibility of the
    result occurring becomes stronger
  • If Joe should have the time, he would go to
    Mexico.
  • If Joe happened to have the time, he would go...
  • If Joe should happen to have the time, he would
    go...

11
Imaginative Conditional Sentences
  • Hypothetical Conditionals
  • Sometimes, the difference between using a future
    conditional and a hypothetical conditional is a
    matter of speaker choice
  • If it rains, Ill stay home. (Future)
  • If it were to rain, I would stay home.
    (Hypothetical)

12
Imaginative Conditional Sentences
  • Counterfactual Conditionals
  • Express impossible events or states in the if
    clause
  • Reference to the present or past
  • If my grandfather were alive today, he would
    experience a very different world. (Present)
  • If my grandfather had been alive in 1996, he
    would have been 100 years old. (Past)
  • The if clause is strongly negated.
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