Choose the correct form: ‘If they had left earlier, they ___ the train.’
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The third conditional refers to an unreal past condition and result.
The result uses 'would have' plus a past participle.
Practice NAT English questions with answers and explanations.
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The third conditional refers to an unreal past condition and result.
The result uses 'would have' plus a past participle.
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'Would rather' followed by a different subject uses a past form for present or future preference.
'Stayed' does not refer to past time here.
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The past decision has an unreal present consequence.
A past perfect condition combines with a present conditional result.
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'Unless' means 'if not' and introduces a real future condition.
The main clause therefore uses 'will miss.'
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A wish about an unreal present situation traditionally uses the past subjunctive 'were.'
This form is used with all persons in formal English.
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A regret about the past uses 'wish' plus the past perfect.
'Had known' shows the unreal earlier situation.
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'Wish + would' can express annoyance about another person's repeated behavior.
The desired change concerns the future.
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After expressions of necessity, formal English may use the mandative subjunctive.
The base form 'submit' is used regardless of the subject.
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Verbs of recommendation can introduce the mandative subjunctive.
The subordinate verb remains in the base form.
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The phrase refers to an unreal present identity.
Formal conditional usage prefers the subjunctive 'were.'
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'Said to' becomes 'told' with an object, and 'can' backshifts to 'could.'
Pronouns change according to the participants.
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'Had I known' is an inverted third conditional equivalent to 'If I had known.'
The conditional conjunction is omitted after inversion.