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Escape Room Museum
pedro
Created on October 24, 2024
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Transcript
ESCAPE ROOM
MUSEUM
WE NEED YOUR HELP!!
All our paintings have been stolen from the museum. Only by answering the following questions correctly, we'll be able to get them back. Are you willing to aid us?
ROOM 1
ROOM 2
wc
1/4
Question 1
If we had installed videocameras before the robbery, we ...
would be stolen
wouldn't have been stolen
won`t be stolen
ROOM 1: Conditionals
2/4
Question 2
If I were the museum's director, I ...
can change the security alarm
would change the security alarm
will change the security alarm
ROOM 1: Conditionals
3/4
Question 3
We will be desperate if the situation ... again
is going to happen
will happen
happens
ROOM 1: Conditionals
would probably fled
4/4
If you set an alarm, the robber
Question 4
will probably flee
had probably fled
ROOM 1: Conditionals
CONTINUE
5/5
Congrats! You've found all the paintings from this room!
ROOM 1
Be careful! You've broken one of our pieces of art! Please, try again!
ROOM 1
1/3
Question 1
The museum's director ... the rooms... in which the robbers entered.
have... checked
had... checked
CAUSATIVE
ROOM 2
2/3
Question 2
Will we ... the damaged window ...?
got... repaired
get... repaired
CAUSATIVE
ROOM 2
3/3
Question 3
had... traced
The director's museum ... the police ... the room.
had... trace
ROOM 2
3/3
ROOM 2
CONTINUAR
Congrats! You've found all the pieces of art!
Be careful! You've broken a piece of art! Please, try again!
ROOM 2
Volver a empezar
You've retrieved all the paintings and you're a pro at grammar! You should be proud of yourself!
WELL DONE!!
We use the first conditional when we talk about possible situations that may happen in the future. This is its structure: If+ present simple, ... will+ infinitive, as in: "If I study hard, I will get good marks".
We use the second conditional when we want to express something we imagine. This is the structure it normally follows: if+ past simple, ... would+ infinitive, or in the sentence that is provided: ... would+ infinitive+ complements if+ past simple. Example sentence: If she were rich, she would travel all around the world.
We use the third conditional to talk about the past, but about something that didn't actually happen. This is the structure it follows: if+ past perfect, would+ have+ past participle, or the other way around (... would+ have+ past participle if+ past perfect). Example sentence: If I hadn't touched the dog, it wouldn't have bitten me.
We use the causative form to express something that someone else did for us. It means that the action wasn't done by the subject, but from another person.This is the structure it normally follows: have+ object+ past participle. Example sentence: I had my car cleaned.