I was in great condition
I think Conditional sentences are sentences that express one thing contingent on something else, e.g. "If it rains, the picnic will be cancelled".
Yes, but they can be rewritten. The conditional statement "If it rains then I will get wet" can be written as "I will get wet if it rains" so that the sentence does not begin with if. In logic, these conditional sentences are also equivalents to "I will not get wet or it rains", which does not contain the word "if".
A conditional statement uses the words if... Then
A conditional statement may or may not be true.
Another name for that is the conditional statement.
A conditional pardon imposes a condition on the offender before it becomes effective.
conditional sentence
This sentence is a conditional sentence, specifically a past unreal conditional. It expresses a situation that did not happen in the past, as indicated by the use of "would have to."
I wouldn't use a semicolon in a conditional (if) sentence. Semicolons can join two independent clauses without a conjunction. The "if" clause in a conditional sentence is dependent, not independent.
This sentence is a "conditional sentence."
An apodosis is the consequential clause in a conditional sentence.
In computer programming, "sentence" is not used. "Conditional sentence" sure sounded like Judicial jargon.Instead, a conditional expression is like:1 < 22
The verb in the given sentence, "could be" is in a conditional present tense.
The judge issued a conditional pardon, all terms must be met before the defendant is released.
Sometimes You must do everything to achieve success. Even though it is Conditional.
This is an active sentence.It is a conditional sentence the form is If + were........would + base form of verb.This kind of conditional sentence is often called the second conditional. It is used for general time conditions that are impossible.Were is used for all subjects eg I she were queen she would......
Yes, but they can be rewritten. The conditional statement "If it rains then I will get wet" can be written as "I will get wet if it rains" so that the sentence does not begin with if. In logic, these conditional sentences are also equivalents to "I will not get wet or it rains", which does not contain the word "if".
Yes, you can start a sentence with "if" to introduce a conditional clause. For example, "If it rains tomorrow, we will stay indoors."