The English third conditional in action

30,626 views ・ 2019-05-03

Simple English Videos


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Help!
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Help!
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Super Agent Awesome!
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That is me.
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You mess with the lady, you mess with me.
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Oh no!
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Oh yeah!
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Thank you Super Agent Awesome.
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If it hadn’t been for you, he’d have gotten away.
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If I’d been faster, he wouldn’t have caught me
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If I hadn’t stopped him, he would have escaped.
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Hi I’m Vicki and I’m British.
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And I’m Jay and I’m American.
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And this lessons about the most difficult grammar structure in the English language.
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It’s the third conditional and it’s so tricky that native English speakers sometimes
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get it wrong.
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If you’re taking an exam like IELTS or Cambridge Advanced or Proficiency, you’ll need to
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get this right.
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But the good news is if you get it right, you’re going to impress your examiners.
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When they hear you use this correctly they’re going to think, wow this student’s
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really good!
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I'll give them top marks.
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It’s definitely worth studying.
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So in this lesson we’ll go through it step by step, so you know how to form it and when
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to use it.
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Let'see how it works.
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Do you remember the story with Super Agent Awesome?
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I was lucky because he stopped a guy who was stealing my handbag.
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Super Agent Awesome!
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That is me.
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You mess with the lady, you mess with me.
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Oh no!
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Oh yeah!
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If he’d stolen my bag, he would have got all my money.
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Did he steal my bag?
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No!
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And did he get all my money?
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No, he didn’t.
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We use the third conditional to talk about things that didn’t happen.
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So what I’m doing here is imagining events in the past that didn’t happen.
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It’s an unreal past.
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We use the third conditional to imagine how things could have been different.
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Like other conditionals, third conditionals have two parts – two clauses.
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One is the condition and one is the result.
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We can reverse the order of the clauses and the meaning stays the same.
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Just remember to use a comma if the sentence starts with 'if'.
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So third conditionals are about imaginary events – things that didn’t happen.
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There’s another conditional that’s about imaginary events – the second conditional.
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We’ve made another video about that.
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I’ll put the link here and you should check it out if you haven’t seen it.
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The difference is the second conditional is about an imaginary present or future, but
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the third conditional is about an imaginary past.
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We’re imagining a different past.
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And we use different tenses.
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Let’s look at them.
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In the condition clause we’ve got ’if’ and the past perfect – so not the past – the
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past perfect.
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It indicates a distance from reality.
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And then we have ‘would have’ and the past participle of the verb.
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I’m British so I said ‘got’ here, but in American English, they’d say 'gotten'.
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They have a different past participle.
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Notice the contractions here.
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We have ‘he’d’ in both clauses, but it stands for different words.
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What’s this one?
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It’s ‘he had’.
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And what’s this one?
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It’s ‘he would’.
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In the condition clause, it’s the past perfect so it’s ‘had’.
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And in the results clause it’s would – ‘would have’ and the past participle.
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You’ll often hear native English speakers say ‘would have’ in the condition clause
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like this.
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But it’s not standard English.
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It sounds uneducated to me.
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Be careful not to do this if you’re taking an exam.
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Yes.
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it’s becoming more common in spoken English, but strictly speaking, it’s wrong.
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I think sometimes the contractions confuse people.
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What other contractions do we use?
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There’s I’d, you’d, he’d, she’d, it’d, (yes, we really do say it’d) we’d
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and they’d.
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And it’s the same contraction for ‘had’ and ‘would’.
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For example, ‘I’d’ can stand for ‘I had’ AND ‘I would’.
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Let’s look how we form the negatives now.
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If I’d been faster, he wouldn’t have caught me
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If I hadn’t stopped him, he would have escaped.
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Again, both these things didn’t happen.
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Super Agent Awesome did stop him and he didn't escape, so we’re imagining a different past
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again.
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To form the negative of the past perfect, we use ‘hadn’t’.
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I hadn’t, you hadn’t, he hadn’t, she hadn’t.
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The verb form doesn’t change, so it’s pretty easy.
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The contraction of had and not is hadn’t.
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And here we have a negative in the results clause.
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The negative contraction of would and not is wouldn’t.
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He wouldn’t have caught me.
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Notice that I’m expressing regret in this sentence and wishing things had been different.
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We often do that.
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We use the third conditional to express regret.
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So when we feel sorry about things that happened.
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But sometimes we use it when we’re thankful as well.
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And we heard a good example of that too.
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Thank you Super Agent Awesome.
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If it hadn’t been for you, he’d have gotten away.
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Here’s a useful phrase: If it hadn't been for you...
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We use this when someone affects a situation somehow and makes a positive difference.
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And then we say how things could have turned out differently.
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Actors say it when they win an award.
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They give a speech and thank everybody and say ‘If it hadn’t been for you, I wouldn’t
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have won this Oscar’.
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You can say it to your teachers.
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‘If it hadn’t been for you, I wouldn’t have passed my exam’.
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OK, I have a different question for you now.
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Is ‘would’ the only modal verb you can use in the third conditional?
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It isn’t.
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You can also say could, should and might.
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They have slightly different meanings but they could all work.
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Just remember to use them with ‘have’ and the past participle.
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OK, so now it’s time for you to try.
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Can you think of something you regret in your life, or something you feel thankful for or
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happy about and then make a third conditional about it.
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Write it in the comments.
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Do you want to try, Vicki?
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Me?
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Yes, give us an example.
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If I hadn’t met Jay, I wouldn’t have started this YouTube channel.
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OK.
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Let me try.
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If Vicki hadn’t started this YouTube channel, we might not have met so many interesting
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people from all around the world.
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We're looking forward to reading your sentences.
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OK so now we’ve made videos about zero conditionals, first conditionals, second conditionals and
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third conditionals.
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Yes, I’m going to put a link here to a playlist with the other videos so you can check them
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out and compare them.
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So are we done?
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Not really because some conditionals are mixed.
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We mix up the tenses.
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Shall we make another video about that?
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Yes, so make sure you subscribe to our channel so you don’t miss it.
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If you’ve enjoyed this video, please share it with a friend.
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And see you all next week everyone!
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Bye.
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Bye-bye.
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