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#2 (permalink) Sat Jan 22, 2005 10:50 am Conditionals |
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Because this is the structure of the conditional III:
IF + condition + result
IF + past perfect + would have + past participle
Had is part of the past perfect construction in the condition clause. If you want to see the conditionals in practice please read this story by Alan Townend: ESL Lesson / Conditionals _________________ Test Of English for International Communication TOEIC Preparation & TOEIC Vocabulary |
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Torsten Learning Coach

Joined: 25 Sep 2003 Posts: 9968 Location: EU
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#3 (permalink) Wed Feb 01, 2006 20:38 pm Conditional III |
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I am from a lating country and I am learning English, but I think you guys made a mistake the conditional III for this would be:
If you had gotten that job, would you....?
instead of what you say
If you had got that job, would you....?
Olga Lucia Hopper |
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Olga Lucia Hopper Guest
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#4 (permalink) Wed Feb 01, 2006 21:31 pm Had got/gotten |
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Hi Olga Lucia Hopper,
It's not really a question of right or wrong. Both forms of the past participle are used. Gotten is used in North America.
Alan _________________ English as a Second Language You can read my ESL story Phrasal Verbs/take |
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Alan Co-founder

Joined: 27 Sep 2003 Posts: 9119 Location: UK
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#5 (permalink) Fri Feb 03, 2006 16:45 pm Had got/gotten |
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Hi Alan:
I am confused, based on your answer, It's right if I say (in UK) I had forgot .... ?? Olga Lucia Hopper |
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Guest
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#6 (permalink) Fri Feb 03, 2006 16:51 pm Forgot |
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Hi,
That's not what i said. I was talking about get not forget.
Alan _________________ English as a Foreign Language You can read my EFL story Only Three Letters |
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Alan Co-founder

Joined: 27 Sep 2003 Posts: 9119 Location: UK
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#7 (permalink) Sat Feb 04, 2006 7:43 am Conditional III |
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. However, forgot is indeed also an acceptable past participle, Olga-- chiefly US, as the Oxford says. . _________________ Native English teacher at Mister Micawber's |
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Mister Micawber Language Coach

Joined: 17 Jul 2005 Posts: 7321 Location: Yokohama, Japan
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#8 (permalink) Sat Oct 25, 2008 13:49 pm Explanation of the Conditional III |
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| If you had got that job, would you have been able to move to a new house? had got is a Past Perfect from the verb: get, right? get changes to got? |
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Saneta I'm here quite often ;-)

Joined: 11 Sep 2008 Posts: 208
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#9 (permalink) Sat Oct 25, 2008 14:00 pm Explanation of the Conditional III |
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. That's right. . _________________ Native English teacher at Mister Micawber's |
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Mister Micawber Language Coach

Joined: 17 Jul 2005 Posts: 7321 Location: Yokohama, Japan
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#10 (permalink) Sun Jan 04, 2009 17:09 pm Had got? |
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Hi every body!!!
Is this the correct verb: Had got? or had gotten?
Thank you. |
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Lizzette I'm new here and I like it ;-)

Joined: 10 Mar 2008 Posts: 11 Location: Miami
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#11 (permalink) Mon Jan 05, 2009 4:09 am Explanation of the Conditional III |
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. Both are fine. . _________________ Native English teacher at Mister Micawber's |
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Mister Micawber Language Coach

Joined: 17 Jul 2005 Posts: 7321 Location: Yokohama, Japan
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#12 (permalink) Sat May 09, 2009 4:35 am Had got/gotten |
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It's not really a question of right or wrong. Both forms of the past participle are used. Gotten is used in North America.
Alan[/quote]
If that is so, why don't you use the american form. There are many difficulties in the tests, and we spend time thinking if that's right or wrong Thanks a lot. |
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Alfwm You can meet me at english-test.net

Joined: 28 Dec 2008 Posts: 94 Location: Bogotá, Colombia
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#13 (permalink) Tue Jun 30, 2009 20:10 pm Explanation of the Conditional III |
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hii , I just thought about like a future action when i saw "would you have been" in the second part of the sentence. thus i wrote like, "If you will have got that job, would you have been able to move to a new house?" please correct me why is it wrong?
Amal. |
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Amalmusica You can meet me at english-test.net

Joined: 19 Mar 2009 Posts: 59 Location: India
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#14 (permalink) Tue Jun 30, 2009 23:46 pm Explanation of the Conditional III |
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Alfwm: Either form is correct, and that is something you have just learned, so there is no need for you to think about that any more.
Amal: The tenses of your sentence do not make sense, particularly because we do not normally use 'will' in if-clauses, so; nevertheless, a past action cannot depend on a future action, in life or in grammar. _________________ Native English teacher at Mister Micawber's |
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Mister Micawber Language Coach

Joined: 17 Jul 2005 Posts: 7321 Location: Yokohama, Japan
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| Expression "do you good" | How do we use Conditional II in English? |