Third Conditional exercises — Set 4: Second vs Third Conditional: Present or Past Unreal? (Worksheet)
Worksheet • 20 questions • 14 min
If I taller, I would join the basketball team. (I'm short now.)
If she the bus, she wouldn't have been late for the interview. (She missed it yesterday.)
If I spoke French, I for that job in Paris. (I don't speak French.)
If we had booked earlier, we better seats. (We booked late last week.)
If he a car, he would drive to work every day. (He doesn't own a car.)
If they the warning, they wouldn't have entered the building. (They ignored it last night.)
If I you, I would talk to the manager about the problem. (I'm not you.)
If she had practised more, she the competition. (The competition was last month.)
If I more free time, I would learn to play the guitar. (I'm very busy now.)
If the team harder last season, they wouldn't have been relegated. (They were lazy.)
If it raining, we would go for a walk. (It's raining right now.)
If I about the meeting, I would have prepared a presentation. (Nobody told me.)
If she in a bigger city, she would have more job opportunities. (She lives in a small town.)
If she the instructions carefully, she wouldn't have made so many mistakes. (She rushed through them.)
If he so much coffee, he would sleep better at night. (He drinks a lot of coffee.)
If they had saved more money in their twenties, they retired earlier. (They spent too much.)
If I rich, I would travel the world. (I'm not rich.)
If the government more in education last decade, schools would be better today.
If you more exercise, you would feel healthier. (You don't exercise much.)
If they the early flight, they would have arrived before lunch. (They took the afternoon flight.)
Third Conditional exercises online (Worksheet)
Can you tell the difference between the second conditional (imaginary present/future) and the third conditional (imaginary past)? This set challenges you to choose the correct conditional based on whether the situation is unreal now or was unreal in the past. Master this distinction to use both second and third conditional sentences accurately.