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Quiz Inglés III

Colaboradores Englis

Created on June 27, 2023

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Review

By Ale Osorio

Inglés III

First conditional

Second conditional

Zero conditional

QUESTION 1/10

"If it rains tomorrow, we'll go to the cinema"This sentence is an example of...

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Third Conditional

Second Conditional

Zero Conditional

QUESTION 2/10

"If we had taken a taxi, we wouldn't have missed the plane"This sentence is an example of...

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RIGHT!

Zero Conditional

First Conditional

SecondConditional

QUESTION 3/10

"If babies are hungry, they cry"This sentence is an example of...

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Second Conditional

First Conditional

Zero Conditional

QUESTION 4/10

"She would travel all over the world if she were rich"This sentence is an example of...

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However

And

QUESTION 5/10

Because

Money can’t buy happiness.[linking word], it certainly makes life more comfortable.

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Since

Although

For example

QUESTION 6/10

[Linking word] the hotel wasn’t very nice, the holiday was great.

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Tag Question

WhQuestion

QUESTION 7/10

The following sentence is a Tag Question or a Wh Question"Where is the restroom?"

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He said that she had been studying English

He said that she had studied English

He said that she studied English

QUESTION 8/10

Change the direct speech to indirect speech:He said, “She was studying English.”

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He told me the baby had been sleeping.

He told me the baby is asleep.

He told me the baby was sleeping.

QUESTION 9/10

Change the direct speech to indirect speech:He told, "The baby's sleeping!"

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is it?

mustn’t it?

won't it?

QUESTION 10/10

Which Tag Question fit more with the sentenceMy wallet isn’t here,

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RIGHT!

PLAY AGAIN?

Case closed!

The First Conditional

The first conditional has the present simple after 'if', then the future simple in the other clause. It's used to talk about things that could easily come true in the future.

  • if + present simple, ... will + infinitive
The Second Conditional

The second conditional uses the past simple after if, then 'would' and the infinitive:

  • if + past simple, ... would + infinitive
It has two uses: 1. We can use it to talk about things in the future that are probably not going to be true 2. We can use it to talk about something in the present which is impossible, because it's not true

The Third Conditional

We make the third conditional by using the past perfect after 'if' and then 'would have' and the past participle in the second part of the sentence:

  • if + past perfect, ... would + have + past participle
It talks about the past. It's used to describe a situation that didn't happen, and to imagine the result of this situation.

Linking Contrasting Ideas

  • While E.g. While my girlfriend only likes chicken, I like all types of meat.
  • Whereas E.g. I like all types of meat, whereas my girlfriend only like chicken.We use while and whereas to link two ideas that contrast with each other in the same sentence.
  • However E.g. Money can’t buy happiness. However, it certainly makes life more comfortable.We use however to link together two contrasting sentences.

Contrast

Although, Even though. Followed by a subject and a verb, E.g. Although the hotel wasn’t very nice, the holiday was great. Despite. Followed by a Gerund. E.g. Despite having all the necessary qualifications, they didn’t offer me the job. In spite of. Followed by a noun. E.g. We enjoyed our camping holiday in spite of the rain.

The Zero Conditional

We can make a zero conditional sentence with two present simple verbs (one in the 'if clause' and one in the 'main clause'):

  • If + present simple, .... present simple.
This conditional is used when the result will always happen.