Conditional Comparison exercises — Set 2: Second, Third & Mixed Conditional Comparison: Present, Past or Cross-Time? (Worksheet)
Worksheet • 20 questions • 12 min
If I had known about the meeting, I there.
If she spoke better English, she that job last year.
If I more money, I would buy a new laptop.
If they had left earlier, they stuck in traffic now.
If we had booked the tickets, we at the concert right now.
If I the lottery last week, I would be a millionaire now.
If she hadn't eaten so much, she sick yesterday.
If I the president, I would change the law.
If he had studied harder, he the exam.
If I you, I wouldn't have said that.
If they had taken a taxi, they arrived on time.
If she weren't so shy, she to the party last night.
If we closer to the beach, we could go swimming every day.
If he afraid of flying, he would have travelled to Australia last summer.
If I had accepted that job offer, I in New York today.
If she closer to her office, she wouldn't spend so much time commuting.
If he better at maths, he would have chosen engineering at university.
If she had gone to university, she a better job now.
If they a map, they wouldn't have got lost.
If I didn't have to work tomorrow, I out tonight.
Conditional Comparison exercises online (Worksheet)
When the situation is unreal, how do you decide between the second, third, and mixed conditional? This second and third conditional exercise challenges you to identify the time frame — is the unreal situation about the present, the past, or does it cross both? These conditional sentences exercises cover types 2, 3, and mixed. Pay close attention to time markers like 'now', 'yesterday', 'today', and 'last year' to choose the right structure.