Conditionals (Types 0, 1 & 2) – English Grammar Exercises For B1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for B1 » Conditionals (Types 0, 1 & 2) – English Grammar Exercises For B1

Exercises:   123456789101112

Choose the most appropriate option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence.

 If I ______ the lottery, I would buy a huge mansion on the coast.

     (a) would win

     (b) win

     (c) won

     (d) to win

 We ______ first-class around the world if we had a hundred million dollars in the bank.

     (a) travel

     (b) would travel

     (c) would traveled

     (d) will travel

3   If I ______ you, I would quit that stressful office job the moment the prize money arrived.

     (a) am

     (b) have been

     (c) would be

     (d) were

 I think my parents ______ much more relaxed if they didn’t have to worry about the mortgage anymore.

     (a) would be

     (b) will be

     (c) are

     (d) would being

 If Sarah ______ suddenly wealthy, she wouldn’t wake up at 6 AM every day.

     (a) becomes

     (b) became

     (c) become

     (d) would become

6   What ______ if you woke up tomorrow and saw a billion dollars in your bank account?

     (a) would you do

     (b) will you do

     (c) do you do

     (d) you would do

7   If we had our own private helicopter, we ______ stuck in this awful city traffic right now.

     (a) won’t be

     (b) wouldn’t be

     (c) aren’t

     (d) wouldn’t been

 Imagine the possibilities! If we ______ endless money, we could literally buy our own private island.

     (a) having

     (b) have

     (c) had

     (d) would have

 If I didn’t need to work for a salary, I ______ all my free time to volunteering at the animal shelter.

     (a) would dedicate

     (b) will dedicate

     (c) would dedicating

     (d) dedicated

10   I wouldn’t tell anyone about the jackpot unless I ______ absolutely certain they wouldn’t ask for a loan.

     (a) am

     (b) were

     (c) would be

     (d) be

11   ______ a massive luxury yacht if you won the grand prize tonight?

     (a) Would you buy

     (b) Will you buy

     (c) You would buy

     (d) Did you buy

12   If my brother ______ his millions wisely, he wouldn’t go bankrupt in a year.

     (a) invests

     (b) would invest

     (c) invested

     (d) to invest

13   I would definitely share the prize with you guys if we ______ a legal agreement beforehand.

     (a) signed

     (b) sign

     (c) would sign

     (d) signing

14   If you didn’t have any financial limits at all, which country ______ to live in?

     (a) would you choose

     (b) do you choose

     (c) you would choose

     (d) will you choose

15   Suppose you ______ the winning numbers tonight, who would be the very first person you’d call?

     (a) will guess

     (b) guessed

     (c) would guess

     (d) guessing

16   Even if I ______ a multi-billionaire, I wouldn’t stop eating at my favorite cheap street food stalls.

     (a) were

     (b) am

     (c) would be

     (d) been

17   Honestly, your plan to buy a golden spaceship sounds ridiculous. If you ______ more practical, you would invest in real estate.

     (a) are

     (b) were

     (c) would be

     (d) being

18   We could travel to Mars for a vacation, assuming we ______ enough money to pay for the trip.

     (a) have

     (b) having

     (c) would have

     (d) had

19   I wouldn’t donate the whole sum to charity unless my own children ______ completely debt-free first.

     (a) are

     (b) would be

     (c) were

     (d) will be

20   It is so fun to dream, but if we ______ expensive lottery tickets every day, we would just go broke!

     (a) keep buying

     (b) would keep

     (c) kept buying

     (d) keep to buy

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (c) won

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Type 2 Conditional uses the Past Simple in the if-clause for an unreal/hypothetical situation in the present/future.
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “win” is a Common Mistake (confusing Type 1 with Type 2). Option (d) “to win” is a Structural Error (infinitive cannot act as a finite verb). Option (a) “would win” is a Strong Distractor (learners often mistakenly put “would” inside the if-clause).

2 (b) would travel

  • Why it is correct (The Key): The main clause of a Type 2 Conditional requires “would + base verb”.
  • Error Analysis: Option (d) “will travel” is a Common Mistake (using future tense when the condition “had” is past). Option (c) “would traveled” is a Structural Error (base verb must follow modals). Option (a) “travel” is a Strong Distractor (matches Type 0, but the condition is hypothetical).

3 (d) were

  • Why it is correct (The Key): In Type 2 Conditionals, “were” is the standard form of the verb “to be” for all subjects (If I were you).
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “am” is a Common Mistake (using present tense for an unreal situation). Option (b) “have been” is a Structural Error here. Option (c) “would be” is a Strong Distractor (putting “would” in the if-clause).

4 (a) would be

  • Why it is correct (The Key): The condition “didn’t have to” is Past Simple (Type 2), so the result clause needs “would + verb”.
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “will be” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “would being” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “are” is a Strong Distractor (logically makes sense, but grammatically incorrect for a hypothetical scenario).

5 (b) became

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Past Simple in the if-clause matches the “wouldn’t wake up” result clause.
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “becomes” is a Common Mistake. Option (c) “become” is a Structural Error (Sarah is singular). Option (d) “would become” is a Strong Distractor.

6 (a) would you do

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Correct question format for a Type 2 result clause (Modal + Subject + Base Verb).
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “will you do” is a Common Mistake (mismatched with “woke up”). Option (d) “you would do” is a Structural Error (statement word order in a question). Option (c) “do you do” is a Strong Distractor (Type 0 question, inappropriate for an unreal scenario).

7 (b) wouldn’t be

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Matches the unreal past condition (“had”).
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “won’t be” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “wouldn’t been” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “aren’t” is a Strong Distractor.

8 (c) had

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Past simple is needed to create the imaginary scenario of possessing endless money.
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “have” is a Common Mistake (Type 1 reality vs. Type 2 fantasy). Option (a) “having” is a Structural Error. Option (d) “would have” is a Strong Distractor.

9 (a) would dedicate

  • Why it is correct (The Key): The condition is “didn’t need” (Type 2), requiring “would + verb” in the main clause.
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “will dedicate” is a Common Mistake. Option (c) “would dedicating” is a Structural Error. Option (d) “dedicated” is a Strong Distractor (missing the modal verb required for the result clause).

10 (b) were

  • Why it is correct (The Key): “Unless” means “if not” and follows the same rules. It requires the past tense “were” to match “wouldn’t tell”.
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “am” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “be” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “would be” is a Strong Distractor.

11 (a) Would you buy

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Question form for the result of a hypothetical condition (“won”).
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “Will you buy” is a Common Mistake. Option (c) “You would buy” is a Structural Error (wrong word order). Option (d) “Did you buy” is a Strong Distractor (asks about a real past event, not a hypothetical future).

12 (c) invested

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Past simple to match the Type 2 result “wouldn’t go”.
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “invests” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “to invest” is a Structural Error. Option (b) “would invest” is a Strong Distractor.

13 (a) signed

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Past simple is required in the if-clause to establish the hypothetical condition for “would share”.
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “sign” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “signing” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “would sign” is a Strong Distractor.

14 (a) would you choose

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Question structure for a Type 2 Conditional result.
  • Error Analysis: Option (d) “will you choose” is a Common Mistake. Option (c) “you would choose” is a Structural Error. Option (b) “do you choose” is a Strong Distractor.

15 (b) guessed

  • Why it is correct (The Key): “Suppose” acts like “If”. The main clause uses “would”, so the condition needs Past Simple.
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “will guess” is a Common Mistake (using future in the condition). Option (d) “guessing” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “would guess” is a Strong Distractor.

16 (a) were

  • Why it is correct (The Key): “Even if” follows conditional rules. “Were” is used for unreal present scenarios.
  • Error Analysis: Option (b) “am” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “been” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “would be” is a Strong Distractor.

17 (b) were

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Unreal condition in the present (“you are not practical, but if you were”).
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “are” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “being” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “would be” is a Strong Distractor.

18 (d) had

  • Why it is correct (The Key): “Assuming” acts as a conditional conjunction. The result is “could travel” (past modal), so the condition must be Past Simple.
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “have” is a Common Mistake. Option (b) “having” is a Structural Error. Option (c) “would have” is a Strong Distractor.

19 (c) were

  • Why it is correct (The Key): “Unless” clause needs Past Simple to match “wouldn’t donate”.
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “are” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “will be” is a Structural Error. Option (b) “would be” is a Strong Distractor.

20 (c) kept buying

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Past Simple needed for a hypothetical present condition (we don’t actually buy them every day).
  • Error Analysis: Option (a) “keep buying” is a Common Mistake. Option (d) “keep to buy” is a Structural Error (wrong verb pattern). Option (b) “would keep” is a Strong Distractor.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  • Type 2 Conditional Structure: The formula is If + Past Simple, Subject + Would/Could/Might + Base Verb. It is used purely for imagining things that are contrary to the present reality (like suddenly having millions of dollars).
  • The “Were” Rule: In formal and standard English, always use “were” instead of “was” for all subjects in a Type 2 if-clause (e.g., If I were, If she were).
  • No “Would” in the If-Clause: The most common mistake is putting “would” right next to “if”. Remember: “If I had” (Correct) vs. “If I would have” (Incorrect).
  • Alternative Conjunctions: Words like unless (if not), suppose/supposing (imagine if), and assuming follow the exact same grammatical tense rules as if.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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