third conditional

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

third conditional (plural third conditionals)

  1. (language education, grammar) A structure used to talk about unreal or unfulfilled events in the past, containing an "if" clause (with a verb in the past perfect) and a main clause (with would + the bare perfect infinitive of a verb).
    "If Columbus hadn't discovered America, he wouldn't have been famous" is an example of the third conditional.

Coordinate terms[edit]