A) Type 2 is used for unrealsituations in the present or future
If the weather were fine, we would go for a walk. b) Type 3 is used for unreal situations in the past: If the weather had been fine, we would have gone for a walk. ↑ ↑ Subjunctive II Conditional mood in the adverbial clause of condition in the main clause of the conditional sentence Mixed Types: 1. We talk about a permanent state or a general characteristic in the subordinate clause and a past action resulting from it in the main. If she liked the outdoors, we would have come for a walk with us. ↑ ↑ Present Subjunctive II Past Conditional mood for a general characteristic for the result 2. We talk about a past action in the sub. cl. and a result of it in the main. If you had spent an hour outdoors, you would feel much better now. ↑ ↑ Past Subjunctive II Present Conditional mood for a condition in the past for the result in the present Implied Conditionals (without an 'if-clause’) 1. Real situations: Tell him the truth. If not, everything will be still worse. Get up right now or/ or else/ otherwise you will be late. 2. Unreal situations: In your place I would tell him the truth. She told him the truth. Otherwise everything would have become still worse. But for my friends / without my friends I would feel lonely. = Якби не мої друзі, я б почувався самотнім.
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