MIXED CONDITIONAL SENTENCES
It is possible for the two parts of a conditional sentence to refer to different times, and the resulting sentence is a “mixed conditional” sentence. There are two types of mixed conditional sentence:
A. Present result of past condition:
1. Form
The tense in the ‘if’ clause is the past perfect, and the tense in the main clause is the present conditional:
| ‘IF’ CLAUSE | MAIN CLAUSE |
| If + past perfect If I had worked harder at school If we had looked at the map |
Present conditional I would have a better job now. we wouldn’t be lost. |
2. Function
In these sentences, the time is past in the ‘if’ clause, and present in the main clause. They refer to an unreal past condition and its probable result in the present. They express a situation which is contrary to reality both in the past and in the present:
‘If I had worked harder at school’ is contrary to past fact – I didn’t work hard at school, and ‘I would have a better job now’ is contrary to present fact – I haven’t got a good job.
If we had looked at the map (we didn’t), we wouldn’t be lost (we are lost).
Examples
- I would be a millionaire now if I had taken that job.
- If you’d caught that plane you’d be dead now.
- If you hadn’t spent all your money on CDs, you wouldn’t be broke.
B. Past result of present or continuing condition.
1. Form
The tense in the If-clause is the simple past, and the tense in the main clause is the perfect conditional:
| ‘IF’ CLAUSE | MAIN CLAUSE |
| If + simple past If I wasn’t afraid of spiders If we didn’t trust him |
Perfect conditional I would have picked it up. we would have sacked him months ago. |
2. Function
In these sentences the time in the If-clause is now or always, and the time in the main clause is before now. They refer to an unreal present situation and its probable (but unreal) past result:
- ‘If I wasn’t afraid of spiders’ is contrary to present reality – I am afraid of spiders, and ‘I would have picked it up’ is contrary to past reality – I didn’t pick it up.
- ‘If we didn’t trust him’ is contrary to present reality – we do trust him, and ‘we would have sacked him’ is contrary to past reality – we haven’t sacked him.
Examples
a. If she wasn’t afraid of flying she wouldn’t have travelled by boat.
b. I’d have been able to translate the letter if my Italian was better.
c. If I was a good cook, I’d have invited them to lunch.
d. If the elephant wasn’t in love with the mouse, she’d have trodden on him by now.
caught have clause condition
have would now
wouldnt time up
picked probable past spent would that would better
c plane reality boat
b job
If good result
The millionaire conditional broke
B mixed past present always trust sacked job
different wasnt both conditional
IF translate contrary school past present clause now
result situation unreal ago
sacked invited havent looked have wouldnt fact sentence Present present spiders present
If There reality wouldnt afraid elephant CLAUSE before clause your MAIN simple reality time would unreal that condition
tense travelled been taken looked worked contrary clause have MAIN worked good afraid sentence
A hard They time probable afraid condition have trust contrary sentence sentences Past Form
