Master all conditional sentence types — zero, first, second, third, and mixed — plus inversion and common conditional errors, for competitive English exams.
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
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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.
| Subtopic | One-line definition | Key signal/clue word |
|---|---|---|
| Zero conditional | Describes general truths and facts that are always true | If + present simple, present simple |
| First conditional | Describes real, likely future situations and their results | If + present simple, will + base verb |
| Second conditional | Describes unreal or hypothetical present/future situations | If + past simple, would + base verb |
| Third conditional | Describes unreal past situations and their hypothetical results | If + had + V3, would have + V3 |
| Mixed conditionals | Combines two different time frames in one sentence | Past condition → present result, or vice versa |
| Unless / provided that / as long as | Alternative connectors that replace "if" | "unless," "provided that," "as long as" |
| Inverted conditionals | Formal structure that drops "if" and inverts subject/auxiliary | "Were I," "Had she," "Should you" |
| Common errors | Recurring tense-pairing mistakes across all conditional types | "would" appearing inside an if-clause |
Definition: Used to talk about general truths, facts, and things that are always true — the result always happens whenever the condition is met.
| If-Clause | Main Clause |
|---|---|
| If + present simple | Present simple |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
Definition: Used to describe real, likely situations in the future and their probable results.
| If-Clause | Main Clause |
|---|---|
| If + present simple | will + base verb |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
Definition: Used to describe unreal, hypothetical, or unlikely situations in the present or future.
| If-Clause | Main Clause |
|---|---|
| If + past simple | would + base verb |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
Definition: Used to describe an unreal past situation and its hypothetical result — both of which never actually happened.
| If-Clause | Main Clause |
|---|---|
| If + had + past participle | would have + past participle |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
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.
| Type | If-Clause | Main Clause |
|---|---|---|
| Past condition → present result | If + had + past participle | would + base verb |
| Present condition → past result | If + past simple | would have + past participle |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
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.
| Connector | Meaning | Example Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| Unless | If...not | Unless + present simple, will/would + base verb |
| Provided that | Only if | Provided that + present simple, will/would + base verb |
| As long as | Only if (informal) | As long as + present simple, will/would + base verb |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
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 Form | Inverted Form |
|---|---|
| If I were... | Were I... |
| If she had known... | Had she known... |
| If you should need... | Should you need... |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
Definition: This covers the recurring mistakes test-makers specifically target across all four conditional types, especially mismatched tense pairings.
| Common Error | Why It's Wrong | Correct Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| "Would" inside the if-clause | The if-clause should never contain "would" | Use present simple, past simple, or had + V3 depending on type |
| Mixing tense pairs from different conditional types | Breaks the required if-clause/main-clause pairing | Match the exact pair for the intended conditional type |
| Using "was" instead of "were" in formal hypotheticals | Considered non-standard in formal exam English | Use "were" for all subjects in second conditional |
Examples
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| 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.
Conditional Types at a Glance
| Type | If-Clause | Main Clause | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zero | Present simple | Present simple | General truth/fact |
| First | Present simple | will + base verb | Real/likely future |
| Second | Past simple | would + base verb | Unreal present/future |
| Third | had + past participle | would have + past participle | Unreal past |
| Mixed (past → present) | had + past participle | would + base verb | Past condition, present result |
| Mixed (present → past) | Past simple | would have + past participle | Present condition, past result |
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.