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Drishti Innovations

Grammar

What you'll learn

  • Form and use all four types of conditional sentences correctly
  • Use the subjunctive mood in formal and hypothetical contexts
  • Apply inversion for emphasis in formal writing
  • Distinguish between defining and non-defining relative clauses

Key concepts

The Four Conditional Structures

TypeConditionResultUse
ZeroIf + present simplepresent simpleUniversal truths and facts
FirstIf + present simplewill + V1Real, likely future situation
SecondIf + past simplewould + V1Unreal/hypothetical present or future
ThirdIf + past perfectwould have + V3Unreal/impossible past situation

Zero Conditional — General Truth

"If you heat water to 100°C, it boils." "If it rains, the ground gets wet."

No time restriction — this is always true.

First Conditional — Real Possibility

"If she studies hard, she will pass the exam." "If you leave now, you will catch the train."

The "if-clause" uses present simple even though it refers to the future. Never use "will" in the if-clause.

Second Conditional — Unreal Present/Future

"If I were rich, I would travel the world." "If she knew the answer, she would tell us."

Note: Use "were" for ALL persons with "be" in second conditional (not "was"), especially in formal writing.

Third Conditional — Unreal Past (Regret/Criticism)

"If he had studied, he would have passed." "If they had left earlier, they would not have missed the flight."

Mixed conditional (past → present result): "If she had taken the medicine then, she would be fine now." (Past condition + present result — mix 3rd and 2nd)


Common Conditional Mistakes

MistakeCorrect form
If I will go…If I go…
If he was… (subjunctive)If he were…
If she would have told me…If she had told me…
I would have wentI would have gone (use V3)

The Subjunctive Mood

The subjunctive expresses wishes, hypothetical situations, demands, suggestions, and formal recommendations. The verb takes its base form regardless of the subject.

Structures that trigger subjunctive:

  • It is essential / important / vital / necessary + that + Subject + V1 (base form)
  • Verbs: suggest, recommend, insist, demand, propose, request + that + Subject + V1

Examples: "It is essential that every student submit the form by Friday." (NOT submits) "The doctor recommended that she rest for a week." (NOT rests) "I insist that he be present at the meeting." (NOT is)

Formal writing: The subjunctive is common in academic and professional English. In informal speech, people often use "should": "It is essential that everyone should submit…" — both are acceptable.


Inversion for Emphasis

Inversion places the auxiliary verb before the subject to create emphasis or formality. Common in formal writing and literary texts.

Trigger phraseNormal orderInverted (emphatic)
NeverI have never seen this.Never have I seen this.
Seldom / RarelyShe rarely makes mistakes.Seldom does she make mistakes.
Not only…but alsoHe not only sings but also dances.Not only does he sing but he also dances.
Hardly / ScarcelyShe had hardly sat down when…Hardly had she sat down when…
Only thenThey only then realised…Only then did they realise
No sooner…thanHe had no sooner arrived than…No sooner had he arrived than…

Inversion requires a change to question word order: auxiliary before subject. The main verb stays in its normal position.


Relative Clauses — Defining vs Non-Defining

Defining relative clause: Identifies which specific person/thing is meant. No commas. Cannot be removed without changing meaning. "The student who scored 100% received a scholarship." (Tells us WHICH student — essential information)

Non-defining relative clause: Adds extra information. Commas required. Can be removed without affecting the core meaning. "Priya, who scored 100%, received a scholarship." (Priya is already identified by name — the clause adds bonus info)

FeatureDefiningNon-defining
CommasNoYes
"that" allowed?YesNo
Can be removed?NoYes
Refers to?Specific (unknown) itemAlready-identified item

Quick check

  1. Fill in: "If the temperature _____ (drop) below 0°C, water _____ (freeze)." (Which conditional?)
  2. Correct the error: "If she would arrive on time, we would start."
  3. Write the subjunctive form: "It is vital that he _____ (attend) the meeting."
  4. Rewrite with inversion: "She has never made such a mistake before."
  5. Add or remove commas as needed: "The book that I lent you is a first edition." and "Moby Dick which was written by Melville is a classic."

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Advanced Grammar.

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