Question
Which sentence correctly uses the conditional mood?
Responses
By running faster, I will win the race.
By running faster, I will win the race.
If I ran faster, I might win the next race.
If I ran faster, I might win the next race.
If I had run faster, I might have won the race.
If I had run faster, I might have won the race.
If I ran faster, I will win the race.
Do you only choose one
Responses
By running faster, I will win the race.
By running faster, I will win the race.
If I ran faster, I might win the next race.
If I ran faster, I might win the next race.
If I had run faster, I might have won the race.
If I had run faster, I might have won the race.
If I ran faster, I will win the race.
Do you only choose one
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The sentences that correctly use the conditional mood are:
- "If I ran faster, I might win the next race."
- "If I had run faster, I might have won the race."
Both of these sentences use appropriate conditional structures. The first is a type 2 conditional (hypothetical present), and the second is a type 3 conditional (hypothetical past).
If you only need to choose one, you can select either of the two.
- "If I ran faster, I might win the next race."
- "If I had run faster, I might have won the race."
Both of these sentences use appropriate conditional structures. The first is a type 2 conditional (hypothetical present), and the second is a type 3 conditional (hypothetical past).
If you only need to choose one, you can select either of the two.
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