English Conditionals: Zero, First, Second, Third & Mixed
English Conditionals: Zero, First, Second, Third & Mixed
A complete guide to all five conditional forms - with structure formulas, real examples, a decision tree, and common errors for Arabic and French speakers.
What Are English Conditionals?
Conditionals are sentences with two parts: an if-clause (the condition) and a result clause (what happens if the condition is true). The key skill is choosing the right tense combination based on whether the situation is real or hypothetical, and whether it refers to the past, present, or future.
English has five main conditional structures. Each one follows a specific formula. Learning the formulas first makes it far easier to produce correct sentences under pressure.
| Conditional | If-clause tense | Result clause | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zero | simple present | simple present | general truths, habits |
| First | simple present | will + base | real future possibility |
| Second | simple past | would + base | unreal present/future |
| Third | past perfect | would have + past participle | unreal past |
| Mixed | past perfect | would + base | past condition, present result |
Zero Conditional
Use the zero conditional for facts, scientific truths, and habits that are always true. Both clauses use the simple present.
Formula
"If water reaches 100 degrees, it boils."
"If she misses breakfast, she gets a headache."
Use when: the result is always true, every time the condition is met. You can replace "if" with "when" and the meaning stays the same - this is a useful test.
If you can replace "if" with "when" without changing the meaning, you are probably dealing with a zero conditional. "When water reaches 100 degrees, it boils" - correct. "When I win the lottery, I will travel" - this changes meaning, so use first conditional.
First Conditional
The first conditional describes real, possible situations in the future. The speaker believes the condition might actually happen.
Formula
"If I pass the exam, I will celebrate."
"If it rains tomorrow, we will cancel the trip."
Use when: the future situation is genuinely possible. The speaker is not certain, but not ruling it out either.
Variations in the Result Clause
The result clause does not have to use "will." Other modal verbs are possible and change the nuance:
| Modal | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| will | certain result | If you study, you will improve. |
| can | ability/permission | If you finish early, you can leave. |
| may / might | possible result | If you call, she might answer. |
| should | advice/recommendation | If you feel ill, you should rest. |
| imperative | instruction | If you arrive late, call me. |
Error: "If he will study harder, he will pass." (will in if-clause)
Correct: "If he studies harder, he will pass." (simple present in if-clause)
Second Conditional
The second conditional describes hypothetical, unlikely, or imaginary situations in the present or future. The speaker does not expect the condition to actually happen.
Formula
"If I had more time, I would study every day."
"If she spoke French, she would get the job."
Use when: the situation is imagined or unlikely. The past tense in the if-clause signals unreality, not past time.
In formal English, use "were" for all subjects in the if-clause, not "was": "If I were you, I would accept." In everyday speech, "If I was you" is common but "were" remains the standard form for exams and formal writing.
Second vs First Conditional: The Real Difference
| Sentence | Conditional | Speaker's view |
|---|---|---|
| If I find a job, I will move abroad. | First | Finding a job is possible |
| If I found a job, I would move abroad. | Second | Finding a job seems unlikely right now |
| If it rains, we will stay inside. | First | Rain is a real possibility |
| If it rained here, we would stay inside. | Second | This is a dry country - unlikely |
Third Conditional
The third conditional refers to unreal situations in the past - things that did not happen. It often expresses regret or criticism.
Formula
"If I had studied harder, I would have passed the exam."
"If you had told me, I would have helped you."
Use when: you are imagining a different outcome for something that already happened. The condition was not met - it is too late to change it.
Error: "If I would have known, I would have come." (would have in if-clause)
Correct: "If I had known, I would have come." (past perfect in if-clause)
This is one of the most frequent errors for Arabic, French, and Spanish speakers. The if-clause always uses the past perfect (had + pp), never "would have."
Variations in the Result Clause
| Result clause | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| would have + pp | certain imagined result | I would have arrived on time. |
| could have + pp | imagined ability/possibility | You could have won if you had tried. |
| might have + pp | uncertain imagined result | She might have agreed if you had asked nicely. |
Mixed Conditionals
Mixed conditionals combine elements of different conditional types. The most common pattern uses a third-conditional if-clause (past event) with a second-conditional result clause (present state).
Past Condition + Present Result
"If I had studied medicine, I would be a doctor now."
"If she had taken the job in London, she would live there today."
Use when: a past event would have changed the present situation. The condition is about the past; the result is about now.
Present Condition + Past Result
"If I were more organised, I would have finished the project on time."
Use when: a permanent characteristic (present) would have changed a past outcome. Less common, but important to recognise.
Conditional Decision Tree
When you are not sure which conditional to use, work through these questions step by step.
REAL Proceed to question 2.
IMAGINARY Proceed to question 3.
GENERAL TRUTH Zero Conditional (present / present)
FUTURE POSSIBILITY First Conditional (present / will + base)
PRESENT / FUTURE Second Conditional (past / would + base)
PAST Third Conditional (past perfect / would have + pp)
YES Mixed Conditional (past perfect / would + base now)
NO Re-check steps 2 or 3.
Common Errors for Arabic and French Speakers
| Error type | Incorrect | Correct | Why it happens |
|---|---|---|---|
| would in if-clause | "If I would study..." | "If I study..." / "If I studied..." | Arabic law/French si + conditional is translated directly |
| would have in if-clause | "If I would have known..." | "If I had known..." | Direct translation of law kuntu (Arabic) or si j'aurais (French - also incorrect in French) |
| First conditional for hypotheticals | "If I will be rich, I will travel." (for an unlikely dream) | "If I were rich, I would travel." | No tense backshift concept in L1 for hypotheticals |
| Missing backshift in third conditional | "If he studied, he would have passed." | "If he had studied, he would have passed." | Past simple used instead of past perfect in if-clause |
| Omitting "have" in result clause | "I would passed the exam." | "I would have passed the exam." | Speed/informality - "have" is reduced and missed |
French Speaker Note
French conditionals use si + imparfait / conditionnel present (second conditional equivalent) and si + plus-que-parfait / conditionnel passe (third conditional equivalent). These structures are close to English. The main trap is "si j'aurais" which is incorrect in French too - French speakers who write this are transferring a spoken error. In English, the same rule applies: never use "would" in the if-clause.
Arabic Speaker Note
Arabic uses law (hypothetical) and itha (real conditional). The law structure does not clearly distinguish between second and third conditionals by tense - context carries this meaning. This is why Arabic speakers often default to one structure for both. Practicing tense backshifting drills specifically targeting this distinction produces rapid improvement.
Practice: Transform the Sentences
One of the best ways to consolidate conditionals is to take one situation and write it in all three (or four) conditional forms, noticing how the meaning shifts.
| Conditional | Sentence about "studying" | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Zero | If I study before bed, I sleep badly. | Always true for me |
| First | If I study this evening, I will be ready for the test. | Real plan / possible |
| Second | If I studied more, I would improve faster. | I don't study enough (imagined present) |
| Third | If I had studied last night, I would have done better. | I didn't study - now it's too late |
| Mixed | If I had studied harder at school, I would speak English better now. | Past event, present result |
Write three to five sentences about your own life using each conditional type. Personalised examples are remembered far more easily than textbook examples. Share them in a lesson for immediate feedback.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Grammar Guides
The complete tense system - all 12 forms explained with usage notes.
Subject-verb agreement, articles, prepositions - the essential framework.
Simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences explained.
Practical strategies to study and practise grammar that actually sticks.
Practise Conditionals With a Live Teacher
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