Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Zero Conditional

building blocksZero Conditional

Introduction

The zero conditional is a structure used for talking about general truths — things which always happen under certain conditions. This page will explain how the zero conditional is formed, and when to use it.

1. The structure of a zero conditional sentence

A zero conditional sentence consists of two clauses, an “if” clause and a main clause (In most zero conditional sentences you can use when or if and the meaning will stay the same.):
“if” clause main clause
If you heat water to 100 degrees, it boils.
If the “if” clause comes first, a comma is usually used. If the “if” clause comes second, there is no need for a comma:
main clause “if” clause
Water boils if you heat it to 100 degrees,
We use the same verb form in each part of a zero conditional: the simple present tense:
“if” clause if + subject + simple present verb
main clause subject + simple present verb

2. Using the zero conditional

The zero conditional is used to talk about things which are always true — such as scientific facts and general truths:
Example Explanation
If you cross an international date line, the time changes. This always happens — every time you cross a date line.
If it rains, the grass gets wet. This is basically always true — the rain makes the grass wet.
Wood doesn't burn if there is no air. This is a scientific fact — wood needs air in order to burn. No air = no fire.
When you are sure that you understand the lesson, you can continue with the exercises.

Zero Conditional

Make a zero conditional sentence using the words.
For example: "water / boil / heat / to 100 degrees" becomes "Water boils if you heat it to 100 degrees."

For each question, type your answers in the box, and then click on "Check".
  1. you / not / eat / you / die


  2. my daughter / eat / too much chocolate / she /get / sick


  3. ice / float / you / drop / it / in water


  4. iron / rust / it / get / wet


  5. if / no / rain / the grass / not / grow

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thanks you