If I had won the lottery, I would have bought a car.
The first conditional and second conditionals talk about the future. With the third conditional we talk about the past. We talk about a condition in the past that did not happen. That is why there is no possibility for this condition. The third conditional is also like a dream, but with no possibility of the dream coming true.
Last week you bought a lottery ticket. But you did not win. :-(
| if | condition | result |
|---|---|---|
| Past Perfect | would have + past participle | |
| If | I had won the lottery, | I would have bought a car. |
Look at these example senteces:
| if | condition | result |
|---|---|---|
| Past Perfect | would have + past participle | |
| If | I had seen Mary, | I would have told her. |
| If | Tara had been free yesterday, | I would have invited her. |
| If | they had not passed their exam, | their teacher would have been sad. |
| If | it had rained yesterday, | would you have stayed at home? |
| If | it had rained yesterday, | what would you have done? |
| result | if | condition |
|---|---|---|
| would have + past participle | Past Perfect | |
| I would have told Mary | if | I had seen her. |
| I would have invited Tara | if | she had been free yesterday. |
| Their teacher would have been sad | if | they had not passed their exam. |
| Would you have stayed at home | if | it had rained yesterday? |
| What would you have done | if | it had rained yesterday? |
Sometimes, we use should have, could have, might have instead of would have, for example: If you had bought a lottery ticket, you might have won.
You can practise now with the following exercises
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