Conditional Sentences Exercises Multiple Choice Exclusive |best| [ SIMPLE — 2025 ]

Example: "If I had taken that job last year, I would be living in Tokyo today." Mixed 2 (Present Cause →right arrow

Explanation: Inverted first conditional. "Should you need" replaces "If you should need" or "If you need." It requires the base form of the verb.

To succeed in these exercises, keep this cheat sheet handy:

Before diving into the exercises, let's review the grammatical formulas for each conditional type. Zero Conditional: Real and Factual Used for general truths, scientific facts, or habits. If + Present Simple, ... Present Simple Example: If you heat ice, it melts. First Conditional: Real and Possible conditional sentences exercises multiple choice exclusive

Supposing you ________ tomorrow's flight, what would your backup plan be?A) missB) missedC) had missedD) will miss

If I ______ you, I ______ that old car. a) was / wouldn't buy b) were / wouldn't buy c) am / won't buy d) had been / wouldn't have bought

If I ______ a law degree (back in 2010), I ______ a politician today. Example: "If I had taken that job last

A) heatedB) heatsC) heatD) will heat

If I _____ more time, I would travel the world. A) have B) had C) will have D) would have

Time expressions like "as soon as," "when," and "until" follow the same tense rules as first conditionals; they take the present tense to refer to the future. Zero Conditional: Real and Factual Used for general

Explanation: Third conditional referring to a past regret. The if-clause requires the Past Perfect ( had brought ).

They the contract if they had noticed the hidden clauses during the initial review. A) wouldn't sign B) won't sign C) wouldn't have signed D) didn't sign 3. Mixed Conditionals