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#2 (permalink) Tue Jun 30, 2009 16:50 pm if-clause condition 3 |
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Hello Schwartz,
Your sentence is basically a variant of a type 3 conditional.
When you talk hypothetically about something that happened in the past, you normally use the past perfect form of the verb in the IF-clause. I have written two sentences for you. The first one talks about what was real in the past, and the other talks about what was not real:
Past fact, and past result (real): - I did not remember his name, so I did not say hello.
To talk about that same past situation hypothetically, you can use a standard type 3 conditional. Everything in the following sentence refers to the past:
Type 3 conditional (unreal past): - If I had remembered his name, I would have said hello.
The difference in your sentence is that there is a reference to a hypothetical past (in the IF-clause) with a hypothetical result in the present. In addition, the verb in your IF-clause is in the passive voice rather than in the active voice:
- If smaller amounts of pesticide had been used by the farmers, the streams around Joplin would not now be so polluted.
_________________________ “In order to shake a hypothesis, it is sometimes not necessary to do anything more than push it as far as it will go.” |
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Esl_Expert I'm here quite often ;-)
Joined: 26 Dec 2008 Posts: 277 Location: USA
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#3 (permalink) Fri Jul 03, 2009 15:34 pm if-clause condition 3 |
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why it isn't this way : If smaller amounts of pesticide had been used by the farmers, the streams around Joplin would have not now been so polluted. |
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Schwartz I'm new here and I like it ;-)
Joined: 28 Dec 2008 Posts: 47
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#4 (permalink) Tue Jul 07, 2009 15:36 pm if-clause condition 3 |
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| Anyone knows? |
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Schwartz I'm new here and I like it ;-)
Joined: 28 Dec 2008 Posts: 47
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