Page 2: Mixed Conditionals and Practice Activities
This page delves into more complex conditional structures and provides practical exercises for applying the concepts learned. It focuses on mixed conditionals that combine different time references and their specific applications.
Definition: Mixed conditionals combine different time references to express complex relationships between past and present situations.
Example: "If I spoke German, I might haven't problem to live in Germany" demonstrates a present condition with past result structure.
Highlight: The practice activities include sentence transformation exercises that help reinforce understanding of different conditional types.
Vocabulary: Past participles and auxiliary verbs (would, could, might) play crucial roles in forming mixed conditionals.
Example: "She wouldn't have a headache now if she had slept well last night" shows how mixed conditionals can express current states resulting from past actions.