The document discusses two types of conditional sentences. Conditional 1 refers to a real possible situation where the cause in the if-clause uses the present tense and the consequence uses the future tense. Conditional 2 refers to an unreal or hypothetical situation where the if-clause uses the past tense and the consequence uses "would" to express the subjunctive mood. It provides the examples "If I go to the restaurant, I will eat a lot of Chinese food" for Conditional 1 and "If I were you, I would be a rich man" for Conditional 2.
The document discusses two types of conditional sentences. Conditional 1 refers to a real possible situation where the cause in the if-clause uses the present tense and the consequence uses the future tense. Conditional 2 refers to an unreal or hypothetical situation where the if-clause uses the past tense and the consequence uses "would" to express the subjunctive mood. It provides the examples "If I go to the restaurant, I will eat a lot of Chinese food" for Conditional 1 and "If I were you, I would be a rich man" for Conditional 2.
The document discusses two types of conditional sentences. Conditional 1 refers to a real possible situation where the cause in the if-clause uses the present tense and the consequence uses the future tense. Conditional 2 refers to an unreal or hypothetical situation where the if-clause uses the past tense and the consequence uses "would" to express the subjunctive mood. It provides the examples "If I go to the restaurant, I will eat a lot of Chinese food" for Conditional 1 and "If I were you, I would be a rich man" for Conditional 2.