Conditionals are used to express both real, likely and unreal situations. As a result, tenses used with them are not flat; they change. That is why the difference between ‘If I arrive’ and ‘If I had ...
Conditionals can be confusing, but they don’t have to be! In this lesson, Claire explains the zero, first, second, and third conditionals with simple examples that actually make sense. You’ll learn ...
English can be hard for other language speakers to learn. To use just one example, there are at least eight different ways of expressing events in the future, and conditional tenses are another matter ...
Practice the future conditional tense through repeat-after-me and shadowing exercises to improve fluency and accuracy.
Food writer Russ Parsons, a regular contributor to this newspaper but still adjusting to Irish ways after moving here from California, was wondering on Twitter/X recently about one of our linguistic ...