Page 109 - Complete IELTS Bands 5 - 6.5
P. 109

First conditional
                                                            •  When talking about actions which happen at the same
      If/Unless+ present tense, future tense I  modal verb    time, use a simple tense:
      (can, should, must, etc.):
                                                               He wears very smart clothes when he goes to work!
      We can go to the park tomorrow if it doesn't rain.       (Not:  when he's goiff[J to  work)
      If I get high enough marks in my exams,  /'II study biology
                                                            •  If you are talking about two actions which happen at the
      at university
                                                              same time but one takes longer than the other. use a
      It expresses a future condition which the speaker thinks   continuous tense for the action which takes longer:
      is possible or likely.                                   I hope to pass my driving test when I'm studving in New
                                                              Zealand.
      Second conditional                                       (Not: when f st:uefy  in NewZeBftmff)
      If/Unless+ past tense, would/could/might+ infinitive:   •  When talking about the future, use a present tense with
      If my parents weren't so busy, I'd spend more time with   when, after, before, until, etc.:
      them.                                                   I won't travel to Canada until/ pass mv fELTS test.
      It expresses an  imaginary, impossible or improbable present   (Not: tffltH f ~~ill pt!ss my I£LTS test)
      or future condition:                                     /'II visit Russia when I've saved enough monev.
      If !lived in California, I'd eat ice cream every day.  (imaginary -  (Not: when f will st~~·e enough money)
      she doesn't live in California)
      If they offered me fifty thousand dollars a year;  I'd accept the
      job. (improbable that they'll offer fifty thousand dollars)


      Unit 8

      Time conjunctions
      You can use time conjunctions (when, after; before, until,
      etc.) to join phrases which say the time something happens
      with the main part of the sentence:
      I'm going to do a postgraduate course after I've graduated.
      (after I've graduated says when  I will do a postgraduate
      course).
      Depending on the context and the tenses of the verbs (see
      below), when can mean:
      •  after:
         Few people continue to dress like students when they
         have graduated.
      •  at about the same time:
         When students graduate, often the hardest thing is to find
         a job which meets their expectations.
      •  at the same time:
         Workers should be forbidden to smoke when they are
         working.
      Until means 'up to the time that':
      Many young people live with their parents untH they get
      married.


      Tenses with time conjunctions
      •  When talking about something which finishes before
         something in the main part of the sentence, use either a
         simple or a perfect form (underlined):
         Most people hope to find a well-paid job when thev
         graduate from universitv (at about the same time as they
         graduate).
         Most people hope to find a well-paid job after thev have
         graduated from universitv (after they graduate).
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