http://www.ToLearnEnglish.com - Resources to learn/teach English (courses, games, grammar, daily page...)
> The past conditional is expressed using the modal "would" before a past infinitive (= "have" + past participle). This construction serves to express missed opportunities and past hypotheses: She told me that she would have liked
to come and see us.
> One finds it often in hypothetical constructions with "if." When "if" is followed by the pluperfect, the conditional past is expected in the second clause: If you had told me the truth, I would have
believed you.
> Note: In a few regions (principally in the United States) one hears the conditional past in both clauses of hypothetical expressions: If you would have told me he was going to win, I wouldn't have believed you. |
1.
If you ________________ (study) hard, you ________________ (pass) your
exam.
ANSWERS 1. If you had studied hard, you would have passed your exam. 2. He told me that he would have liked to come to the USA with us. 3. If he hadn't worked all day long, he would have been happy to go to the pictures with you. |