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A2 Grammar - Zero Conditional

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
57 views4 pages

A2 Grammar - Zero Conditional

Uploaded by

Samer dawan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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 Zero Conditional

There are 10 questions in this quiz. Choose the correct answer.


1. Which word fills the space?
______ you have any more questions, you can go on a break now.

Unless
If
You

Hide explanation

Zero Conditional

Use:
The first conditional structure is used to talk about something which is always true. It always happens, on the
condition that something else happens.
Example: If it rains a lot, our garden floods.

Form:
1. Make the first conditional in this way.

If I present simple , I present simple


When you you
Unless he he
she... she...

Examples: If you fly on a budget airline, you have to buy your own drinks.
When we visit Geoff, he always cooks us a roast dinner.

Or

I present simple if I present simple


you when you
he unless he
she... she...

Examples: You have to buy your own drinks if you fly on a budget airline.
Geoff always cooks us a roast dinner when we visit him.

2. You can also form the zero conditional with the imperative form.
If you have a membership card, enter through the door on the left.
Enter through the door on the left if you have a membership card.
3. You can also form the zero conditional using a modal verb.
If the alarm goes off, we should leave the building.
If it’s rainy and sunny at the same time, you can often see a rainbow.
4. Different tenses can be used in the If / When (‘condition’) clause. However, only the present simple, a
modal or imperative form can be used in the ‘result’ clause.
If we’ve finished all our work, we can leave early.
If people are getting enough exercise, they usually feel better emotionally as well as
physically.

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 A2 Grammar topics

Articles (a2_articles.htm) 9/10

Adverbs - describing verbs (b1_adverbs.htm) 10/10

Adverbial phrases (A2_adverbs_of_frequency_place_time.htm) 7/10

Can / could (A2_can_could.htm) 10/10

Comparative adjectives (a2_comparative_adjectives.htm)

First Conditional (A2_First_Conditional.htm) 9/10

Gerunds & infinitives (A2_Gerund_infinitive.htm) 8/10

Going to (A2_going_to.htm) 6/10

Have to (A2_have_to.htm) 10/10

How questions (A2_How_questions.htm) 9/10

Imperative forms (A2_imperative.htm) 9/10

Past continuous (A2_past_continuous.htm) 5/10

Past simple (A2_past_simple.htm) 9/10

Phrasal verbs (inseparable) (A2_phrasal_verbs_inseparable.htm) 5/10


Phrasal verbs (separable) (A2_phrasal_verbs_separable.htm)

Present continuous (A2_present_continuous.htm) 10/10

Present continuous for future (A2_present_continuous_for_future.htm) 7/10

Present perfect (A2_present_perfect.htm) 7/10

Should / ought to (A2_ShouldOught.htm) 10/10

Some / any / much / many (A2_some_any_much_many.htm) 6/10

Subject & object questions (A2_subject_and_object_questions.htm) 6/10

Superlatives (A2_superlative.htm) 8/10

Uncountable nouns (A2_Uncountable_nouns.htm) 8/10

Will / won't (A2_will.htm) 8/10

Zero conditional (A2_zero_conditional.htm) 6/10

Would like vs like (A2_would_like.htm) 8/10

 Grammar

A1 Grammar topics (a1_grammar.html)

A2 Grammar topics (a2_grammar.html)

B1 Grammar topics (b1_grammar.html)

B2 Grammar topics (b2_grammar.html)

Grammar home (index.html)

Grammar by CEF Level (../CEFR/cefr_grammar.htm)

Grammar by exam (grammar.html)

Mobile grammar App (../mobile/english_grammar_mobile_app.htm)

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