Conditional Sentences

30 minutes Intermediate 48 Questions
Topic Overview

Master all conditional sentence types — zero, first, second, third, and mixed — plus inversion and common conditional errors, for competitive English exams.

Complete Topic Overview

Topic Introduction

Conditional sentences test whether you understand the relationship between an "if" condition and its result — and more importantly, which exact tense pair is required depending on whether the situation is a fact, a likely future event, an unreal present, or an unreal past. Get the tense pairing wrong, and the whole sentence breaks.

 

Video : Conditional Sentence

 

This topic covers:

  • Zero conditional (general truths)
  • First conditional (real / likely)
  • Second conditional (unreal / hypothetical)
  • Third conditional (past unreal)
  • Mixed conditionals
  • Unless, provided that, as long as
  • Inverted conditionals (were/had/should)
  • Common errors in conditionals

Conditional sentences are tested heavily in NTS, PPSC, FPSC, CSS, and university entry tests — both as standalone grammar questions and disguised inside sentence-correction items.

Quick Concept Map

SubtopicOne-line definitionKey signal/clue word
Zero conditionalDescribes general truths and facts that are always trueIf + present simple, present simple
First conditionalDescribes real, likely future situations and their resultsIf + present simple, will + base verb
Second conditionalDescribes unreal or hypothetical present/future situationsIf + past simple, would + base verb
Third conditionalDescribes unreal past situations and their hypothetical resultsIf + had + V3, would have + V3
Mixed conditionalsCombines two different time frames in one sentencePast condition → present result, or vice versa
Unless / provided that / as long asAlternative connectors that replace "if""unless," "provided that," "as long as"
Inverted conditionalsFormal structure that drops "if" and inverts subject/auxiliary"Were I," "Had she," "Should you"
Common errorsRecurring tense-pairing mistakes across all conditional types"would" appearing inside an if-clause

Subtopic Deep-Dive

1. Zero conditional (general truths)

Definition: Used to talk about general truths, facts, and things that are always true — the result always happens whenever the condition is met.

If-ClauseMain Clause
If + present simplePresent simple

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
If you heat ice, it will melts.If you heat ice, it melts.
If water reach 100°C, it boils.If water reaches 100°C, it boils.
If plants don't get sunlight, they died.If plants don't get sunlight, they die.

Common Mistake: Using "will" in the main clause instead of present simple, confusing zero conditional with first conditional.

Exam Tip: If both clauses describe something that's ALWAYS true, keep both clauses in present simple — no "will" needed.

2. First conditional (real / likely)

Definition: Used to describe real, likely situations in the future and their probable results.

If-ClauseMain Clause
If + present simplewill + base verb

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
If it rains tomorrow, we will stayed home.If it rains tomorrow, we will stay home.
If she will study hard, she will pass the exam.If she studies hard, she will pass the exam.
If you don't hurry, you will missed the bus.If you don't hurry, you will miss the bus.

Common Mistake: Using "will" inside the if-clause itself, when the if-clause must always stay in present simple.

Exam Tip: "Will" only belongs in the main clause, never in the if-clause.

3. Second conditional (unreal / hypothetical)

Definition: Used to describe unreal, hypothetical, or unlikely situations in the present or future.

If-ClauseMain Clause
If + past simplewould + base verb

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
If I had more money, I will travel the world.If I had more money, I would travel the world.
If she was the manager, she would change the policy.If she were the manager, she would change the policy.
If they would study harder, they would get better grades.If they studied harder, they would get better grades.

Common Mistake: Using "would" inside the if-clause itself, which is one of the most common conditional errors tested.

Exam Tip: In formal English, use "were" instead of "was" for all subjects in second conditional hypothetical statements.

4. Third conditional (past unreal)

Definition: Used to describe an unreal past situation and its hypothetical result — both of which never actually happened.

If-ClauseMain Clause
If + had + past participlewould have + past participle

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
If I had known about the meeting, I would attend it.If I had known about the meeting, I would have attended it.
If she studied harder, she would have passed the exam.If she had studied harder, she would have passed the exam.
If they would have left earlier, they would have caught the flight.If they had left earlier, they would have caught the flight.

Common Mistake: Using "would have" in the if-clause instead of "had + past participle."

Exam Tip: The if-clause never contains "would" — only "had + past participle" describes the unreal past condition.

5. Mixed conditionals

Definition: Combines two different time frames in a single sentence — usually a past condition with a present result, or a present condition with a past result.

TypeIf-ClauseMain Clause
Past condition → present resultIf + had + past participlewould + base verb
Present condition → past resultIf + past simplewould have + past participle

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
If I had taken that job, I would have been happier now.If I had taken that job, I would be happier now.
If she isn't afraid of heights, she would have gone skydiving with us.If she weren't afraid of heights, she would have gone skydiving with us.
If he had finished his degree, he has a better job now.If he had finished his degree, he would have a better job now.

Common Mistake: Forcing both clauses into the same tense pattern instead of recognizing that mixed conditionals deliberately combine two different time frames.

Exam Tip: Ask "which clause is about the past and which is about the present?" — that determines which half of the mixed pattern to use.

6. Unless, provided that, as long as

Definition: Alternative conditional connectors that replace "if" — "unless" means "if...not," while "provided that" and "as long as" add a required condition for the result to happen.

ConnectorMeaningExample Pattern
UnlessIf...notUnless + present simple, will/would + base verb
Provided thatOnly ifProvided that + present simple, will/would + base verb
As long asOnly if (informal)As long as + present simple, will/would + base verb

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
Unless you don't study, you will fail.Unless you study, you will fail.
Provided that you will arrive early, we can start on time.Provided that you arrive early, we can start on time.
As long as you will follow the rules, you can stay.As long as you follow the rules, you can stay.

Common Mistake: Adding a second negative after "unless," since "unless" already carries the meaning of "if...not."

Exam Tip: Never use "not" directly after "unless" — it already means "if...not" by itself.

7. Inverted conditionals (were/had/should)

Definition: A more formal way of writing conditional sentences that drops "if" entirely and instead inverts the subject and auxiliary verb (were, had, should) at the start of the sentence.

Standard FormInverted Form
If I were...Were I...
If she had known...Had she known...
If you should need...Should you need...

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
Were I you, I will accept the offer.Were I you, I would accept the offer.
Had she arrived on time, she would missed the train.Had she arrived on time, she would not have missed the train.
If should you need any help, you will contact me.Should you need any help, you may contact me.

Common Mistake: Keeping "if" alongside the inversion, when the inverted structure should completely replace "if."

Exam Tip: Inverted conditionals never use "if" — the inversion itself (Were/Had/Should at the start) replaces it entirely.

8. Common errors in conditionals

Definition: This covers the recurring mistakes test-makers specifically target across all four conditional types, especially mismatched tense pairings.

Common ErrorWhy It's WrongCorrect Pattern
"Would" inside the if-clauseThe if-clause should never contain "would"Use present simple, past simple, or had + V3 depending on type
Mixing tense pairs from different conditional typesBreaks the required if-clause/main-clause pairingMatch the exact pair for the intended conditional type
Using "was" instead of "were" in formal hypotheticalsConsidered non-standard in formal exam EnglishUse "were" for all subjects in second conditional

Examples

IncorrectCorrect
If I would have known, I would have helped.If I had known, I would have helped.
If she will come early, we will start the meeting on time.If she comes early, we will start the meeting on time.
If he was the team captain, he would lead more confidently.If he were the team captain, he would lead more confidently.

Common Mistake: Treating all four conditional types as interchangeable instead of matching the exact tense pair required by the sentence's intended meaning.

Exam Tip: Before answering, ask: "Is this real/likely, hypothetical present, or hypothetical past?" — that single question identifies which tense pair is correct.

Comparison Table

Conditional Types at a Glance

TypeIf-ClauseMain ClauseMeaning
ZeroPresent simplePresent simpleGeneral truth/fact
FirstPresent simplewill + base verbReal/likely future
SecondPast simplewould + base verbUnreal present/future
Thirdhad + past participlewould have + past participleUnreal past
Mixed (past → present)had + past participlewould + base verbPast condition, present result
Mixed (present → past)Past simplewould have + past participlePresent condition, past result

Common Traps in This Topic

  • Mixing "will" or "would" into the if-clause when it should stay in simple present or simple past
  • Confusing second and third conditional tense pairs inside sentence-correction items
  • Testing "was" vs. "were" in formal hypothetical statements
  • Inverted conditionals where "if" is mistakenly kept alongside the inversion
  • Mixed conditional sentences that look like simple tense errors at first glance but actually require recognizing two different time frames
  • "Unless" paired with an unnecessary "not," creating an unintended double negative

Cheat Sheet / Quick Revision

  • Zero: if + present, present (facts/truths)
  • First: if + present, will + base verb (real/likely future)
  • Second: if + past simple, would + base verb (unreal present/future); use "were," not "was"
  • Third: if + had + V3, would have + V3 (unreal past)
  • Mixed: match each clause to its own correct time frame, not the same pattern
  • "Would" never appears in the if-clause, in any conditional type
  • "Unless" already means "if not" — never add another negative after it
  • Inverted conditionals drop "if" entirely: Were / Had / Should + subject

Wrap-Up

Every conditional sentence is really a tense-pairing puzzle — once you can identify whether a situation is a fact, a likely future, an unreal present, or an unreal past, the correct tense pair follows automatically.

21
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
If the sentence is about something that didn't happen in the past and can't be changed now, it's third conditional.
A If she had known about the discount, she would have bought more items.
B If she knew about the discount, she would have bought more items.
C If she had known about the discount, she would buy more items.
D If she had known about the discount, she has bought more items.
22
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
Look for finished past events with regret or hindsight — that's a strong signal for third conditional.
A If the team had practiced harder, they would have won the championship.
B If the team practiced harder, they would have won the championship.
C If the team had practiced harder, they would win the championship.
D If the team had practiced harder, they have won the championship.
23
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
When both the cause and result are firmly in the unchangeable past, use the full third conditional pattern.
A If the doctors had diagnosed the illness earlier, the treatment would have been more effective.
B If the doctors diagnosed the illness earlier, the treatment would have been more effective.
C If the doctors had diagnosed the illness earlier, the treatment would be more effective.
D If the doctors had diagnosed the illness earlier, the treatment has been more effective.
24
Choose the sentence with no conditional error.
Hard 1 Mark
For past events that are over and can't be undone, both clauses must stay anchored in the past with "had" and "would have."
A If the engineers had tested the bridge more thoroughly before opening it, the structural failure would have been prevented entirely.
B If the engineers tested the bridge more thoroughly before opening it, the structural failure would have been prevented entirely.
C If the engineers had tested the bridge more thoroughly before opening it, the structural failure would be prevented entirely.
D If the engineers had tested the bridge more thoroughly before opening it, the structural failure has been prevented entirely.
25
Choose the correct sentence.
Easy 1 Mark
Past condition + present result = "had + V3" in the if-clause, "would + base verb" in the main clause.
A If I had taken that job, I would be living in Dubai now.
B If I took that job, I would be living in Dubai now.
C If I had taken that job, I would have been living in Dubai now.
D If I have taken that job, I would be living in Dubai now.
26
Choose the correct sentence.
Easy 1 Mark
Present condition + past result = past simple in the if-clause, "would have + V3" in the main clause.
A If she weren't so shy, she would have spoken up at the meeting yesterday.
B If she isn't so shy, she would have spoken up at the meeting yesterday.
C If she wasn't so shy, she would have spoken up at the meeting yesterday.
D If she weren't so shy, she would speak up at the meeting yesterday.
27
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
Ask whether the result is happening right now (present) or already finished (past) before choosing the verb form.
A If he had saved money earlier, he wouldn't be in debt now.
B If he saved money earlier, he wouldn't be in debt now.
C If he had saved money earlier, he wouldn't have been in debt now.
D If he has saved money earlier, he wouldn't be in debt now.
28
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
Mixed conditionals testing a permanent trait often pair "weren't" (not "wasn't") with "would have + V3."
A If he weren't so stubborn, he would have accepted the apology last night.
B If he isn't so stubborn, he would have accepted the apology last night.
C If he weren't so stubborn, he would accept the apology last night.
D If he wasn't so stubborn, he would have accepted the apology last night.
29
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
If the result describes "right now," the main clause needs "would + base verb," not "would have."
A If she hadn't missed her flight, she would be at the conference right now.
B If she didn't miss her flight, she would be at the conference right now.
C If she hadn't missed her flight, she would have been at the conference right now.
D If she haven't missed her flight, she would be at the conference right now.
30
Choose the sentence with no conditional error.
Hard 1 Mark
Look for time-word clues like "today" or "now" in the result clause — they signal the result should stay in the present, not the past.
A If the negotiations hadn't collapsed last year, the two companies would be merging into a single organization today.
B If the negotiations didn't collapse last year, the two companies would be merging into a single organization today.
C If the negotiations hadn't collapsed last year, the two companies would have been merging into a single organization today.
D If the negotiations haven't collapsed last year, the two companies would be merging into a single organization today.
31
Choose the correct sentence.
Easy 1 Mark
"Unless" = "if...not" — never add a second negative after it.
A Unless you study, you will fail the exam.
B Unless you don't study, you will fail the exam.
C Unless you will study, you will fail the exam.
D Unless you studied, you will fail the exam.
32
Choose the correct sentence.
Easy 1 Mark
"Provided that" behaves exactly like "if" — apply the same tense rules.
A Provided that you arrive on time, the meeting will proceed as planned.
B Provided that you will arrive on time, the meeting will proceed as planned.
C Provided that you arrived on time, the meeting will proceed as planned.
D Provided that you arrive on time, the meeting proceeded as planned.
33
Choose the correct sentence.
Easy 1 Mark
"As long as" = "only if" — treat it exactly like a standard if-clause.
A As long as you follow the instructions, you will pass the course.
B As long as you will follow the instructions, you will pass the course.
C As long as you followed the instructions, you will pass the course.
D As long as you follow the instructions, you passed the course.
34
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
Read "unless" as "if...not" in your head before checking the rest of the sentence for an extra negative.
A Unless the manager approves the request, the order won't be processed.
B Unless the manager doesn't approve the request, the order won't be processed.
C Unless the manager will approve the request, the order won't be processed.
D Unless the manager approved the request, the order won't be processed.
35
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
The verb right after "as long as" should match the same tense rule as the if-clause in a first conditional.
A You can borrow my car as long as you return it by tomorrow.
B You can borrow my car as long as you will return it by tomorrow.
C You can borrow my car as long as you returned it by tomorrow.
D You can borrow my car as long as you don't return it by tomorrow.
36
Choose the sentence with no error.
Hard 1 Mark
When a sentence uses two different conditional connectors, check each one separately for the same tense and negative rules.
A Unless the supplier confirms the shipment by Friday, the launch will be postponed, provided that no backup plan is in place.
B Unless the supplier confirms the shipment by Friday, the launch will be postponed, provided that no backup plan will be in place.
C Unless the supplier doesn't confirm the shipment by Friday, the launch will be postponed, provided that no backup plan is in place.
D Unless the supplier confirmed the shipment by Friday, the launch will be postponed, provided that no backup plan is in place.
37
Choose the correct sentence.
Easy 1 Mark
Inverted conditionals replace "if" entirely — they never appear together.
A Were I in your position, I would think twice.
B If I were in your position, I would think twice were.
C Were I in your position, I will think twice.
D If were I in your position, I would think twice.
38
Choose the correct sentence.
Easy 1 Mark
"Had" at the start of a sentence (without "if") signals an inverted third conditional.
A Had I known the truth, I would have reacted differently.
B If had I known the truth, I would have reacted differently.
C Had I known the truth, I would react differently.
D Having known the truth, I would have reacted differently — had.
39
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
"Should" at the start of a sentence often signals a polite, formal inverted conditional.
A Should you need further assistance, please contact our support team.
B If should you need further assistance, please contact our support team.
C Should you needed further assistance, please contact our support team.
D Should you needing further assistance, please contact our support team.
40
Choose the correct sentence.
Medium 1 Mark
Inverted second conditionals always start with "Were," never "Was."
A Were she more confident, she would apply for the promotion.
B Was she more confident, she would apply for the promotion.
C Were she more confident, she will apply for the promotion.
D If were she more confident, she would apply for the promotion.
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Difficulty Distribution
Easy 7
Medium 10
Hard 3