“I don’t feel well,” she said.
She said she didn’t feel well.
A yellow fruit you peel.
BANANA
Complete: If it ______ (snow) tomorrow, we’ll stay home.
snows
Complete: If I ______ (be) the president, I would change the law.
were
Complete: If I ______ (study) more, I would have passed the exam.
had studied
“We have been working all day,” they said.
They said they had been working all day.
A sea animal with eight legs.
Octopus
Complete: If you don’t hurry, you ______ (miss) the train.
will miss
Choose: If he worked harder, he ______ (pass) the course.
would pass
Rewrite correctly: If she didn’t forget her keys, she wouldn’t be late.
If she hadn’t forgotten her keys, she wouldn’t have been late.
“I’ll send you the file tomorrow,” he said.
He said he would send me the file the next day.
A sweet food made with flour, sugar, and eggs.
cake
Explain: What’s the structure of the first conditional?
If + Present Simple, + will + base verb
Explain: When do we use the second conditional?
For unreal or hypothetical situations in the present or future.
Explain the difference between 2nd and 3rd conditionals.
2nd = unreal present/future; 3rd = unreal past.
“Please, don’t forget to lock the door,” she told me.
She told me not to forget to lock the door.
A hot drink made from leaves, often green or black.
TEA
Correct the mistake: If I will see him, I will tell him.
If I see him, I’ll tell him.”
Correct this sentence: If I would have money, I would travel the world.
“If I had money, I would travel the world.”
Complete: If they ______ (leave) earlier, they wouldn’t have missed the flight.
had left
Report the question: “Where have you been all night?” he asked.
He asked where I had been all night.
You do this to stay healthy, often in a gym or outside.
EXERCISE
Create your own sentence about technology using the 1st conditional.
(Open answer) e.g. If AI keeps developing, many jobs will disappear.
Create a regret sentence using “If I were you”.
(OPEN ANSWER) If I were you, I would apologize to her.
Write a regret sentence using the 3rd conditional and the word “wish.”
I wish I had studied harder for the exam.