‘The eategory of Mood In English. The Oblique Moods. Basie Form-ypes ‘The Subjunctive Mood
Conditionals Subjunctive
Real Conditionals: Factual /Type 0/ and Predictive /Type 1/ Conditionals. Basic forms and Variations. | Subfunctive
‘Unreal Conditionals: Type I! & Type Il. Basi forms and Vaialons. eae
weet Uf s¥/sthStebjunctve I, then sbisth +Condttional Mood} | *#€ Stpposttional Mood
IF .would
WF. # should
I+ were to
{f..# could do/ could have done
Alternatives to “iF”
{only if, on condition that, provided/eroviding, as iong as/so long as,
what fj, suppese/ supposing, assuming, imagine, say
otherwise, or else, You or, whether..or even if vs. even though
But for (ifit were not for/ifit had not been for)
if vs, in case
Unless vs. if not
Omission of “if” (inversion of subject & auxifiary)
‘Mixed Conditionals
Implied Conditionals
‘Subjunctive IL { patterns with the Unreal Past) {ndicati
Iwish (+ post simple, +past perfect, +would } vs. thope... ; (Lwish to do this }
only in the meoning/ thope }
It’s time sb did sth (for sb} to do sth
+08 ff0s though ( Unreal vs. Real Comparisons)
I would rather/ | would sooner (personal preferences)
‘Subjunctive | (main patterns/ fixed expressions)
Suppositional Mood (basic patterns). Emotional Should
‘The Subjunctive Mood in the Reported Speech
References
Longman Advanced Learner's Grammar | Unit 10 (p. 120-129), Unit 11 (p. 130-139), Unit 9 (p_113)
‘A Practical English Grammar Unit 21 (p. 196-206), Unit 28 (p. 253-255), Unit 29 297- 3017 (p258-260), Unit 33
(Thomson A.J. Martine A.V.)
3371 (p. 297) Unit 34 /340/ (p. 299 - 300), Unit 22 235 ~ 237/ (p. 208-21)
New Round-up 6 (vans V., Dooley J)
Unit 8 (p. 140-153), Unit7 (p. 124, p. 136)
English Grammar in Use (\turphy R.)
Unit 34, Unit 35, Units 37-40, Unit $7-C, Unit 38, Unit 111 D, Unis T1311,
Gnit 117,
Grammarway 4 (Dooley J, Evans F
Cait 9 (p. 136.
j_ Unit 7 (103-104)