Phrasal Verbs
Phrasal Verbs
CONTENIDO
A.
B.
MULTI-WORD VERBS............................................................................................. 2
CONDITIONAL SENTENCES IN ENGLISH................................................................6
Summary................................................................................................................. 6
Conditional sentences.......................................................................................... 6
1. Conditional sentences - type I...........................................................................7
Use....................................................................................................................... 7
Form..................................................................................................................... 7
Examples.............................................................................................................. 8
2. Conditional sentences - type II..........................................................................8
Use....................................................................................................................... 8
Form..................................................................................................................... 8
Examples.............................................................................................................. 8
3. Conditional sentences - type III.........................................................................9
Use....................................................................................................................... 9
Form..................................................................................................................... 9
Examples.............................................................................................................. 9
C. Conditional sentences - Special types and structures.......................................9
1. Structure........................................................................................................... 9
2. Types............................................................................................................... 10
Real Condition.................................................................................................... 10
Unreal Condition................................................................................................. 10
3. Special Features.............................................................................................. 10
D. Conditional sentences - Special types and structures........................................11
1. Structure......................................................................................................... 11
2. Types............................................................................................................... 11
Real Condition.................................................................................................... 11
Unreal Condition................................................................................................. 11
3. Special Features.............................................................................................. 11
E. Mixed Conditionals............................................................................................. 12
Mixed Conditionals................................................................................................ 12
F. if I were you - if I was you - which is correct?.....................................................13
G. will and would in if-clauses................................................................................. 13
1. will in if-clauses............................................................................................... 13
2. would in if-clauses........................................................................................... 13
H. Replacing if - Omitting if - if vs. when - in case vs. if..........................................13
1. Replacing if..................................................................................................... 13
2. Omitting if....................................................................................................... 13
3. if vs. when....................................................................................................... 14
4. in case vs. if.................................................................................................... 14
ANEXO...................................................................................................................... 15
PHRASAL VERBS
A. MULTI-WORD VERBS
(Verb + preposition)
(Verb + adverb)
Meaning
Literal meaning
Non-literal
meaning
Example
He looked up and saw a
plane.
Here the meaning of the
verb and the particle
have not changed.
He looked up = He looked
+ up (in the direction of
the sky)
He looked up all the new
words in the dictionary.
In this sentence, look up
= to hd information in a
reference book.
For example. The particle
can be used to give the
meaning
of
visiting
someone informally.
Multiple
meanings
WORD ORDER
Each multi-word verv has its own rule for word order. Multi-word
vervs which have more than one meaning can have several word
order rules.
Some descriptions of these rules are too complex to be useful, but
here are four types which cover most multi-word verbs
Type
Type 1 multiword verbs
Meaning
Some multi-word verbs are
intransitive( i.e , they dont take
an objec ).
We can use these multi-word
verbs in a sentence on their
own or continue the sentence in
Example
Jhon called round.
Jhon called round last
night.
Jhon called round to
see you
Jhon
called
round
because he wanted to
Multi-word
verbs
are
transitive(i.e they take a direct
object) and separable ( i.e. it is
is possible to separate the verb
and the
participle).
For
example. These two sentences
have the same meaning:
Im looking for my
keys .
Not Im looking my
keys for.
Im looking for them.
Not Iam looking them
for
type
I
II
condition
condition possible to fulfill
condition in theory possible to fulfill
III
FORM
type
if clause
main clause
Simple Present
II
Simple Past
would + infinitive *
III
Past Perfect
if clause
main clause
If I study,
II
If I studied,
III
If I had studied,
main clause
if-clause
if I study.
II
if I studied.
III
if I had studied.
Examples
long forms
II
III
short/contracted forms
* We can substitute could or might for would (should, may or must are sometimes possible, too).
I would pass the exam.
I could pass the exam.
I might pass the exam.
I may pass the exam.
I should pass the exam.
I must pass the exam.
main clause
will-future
or
infinitive
or
Modal + infinitive
EXAMPLES
If I study,
if I study.
10
USE
main clause
would + infinitive
or
could + infinitive
or
might + infinitive
EXAMPLES
If I studied,
If I studied,
If I studied,
if I studied.
Past Perfect
EXAMPLES
main clause
would + have + past participle
or
could + have + past participle
or
might + have + past participle
11
If I had studied,
If I had studied,
If I had studied,
if I had studied.
(2)
(3)
2. TYPES
Aside from the typical type I, II, III strucure, conditionals can be divided into two categories:
real and unreal conditionals.
REAL CONDITION
If I have money, I spend it.
UNREAL CONDITION
If I had had money, I
would have spent it.
12
3. SPECIAL FEATURES
Modal verbs
Main clauses with real conditional tenses can have modal verbs.
If I have money, I can spend it.
You can use could and might instead of would in unreal conditional clauses.
If I had money, I could spend it.
(I would be able to spend it.)
If I had money, I might spend it.
(I would possibly spend it.)
1. STRUCTURE
(2)
(3)
2. TYPES
Aside from the typical type I, II, III strucure, conditionals can be divided into two categories:
real and unreal conditionals.
13
REAL CONDITION
If I have money, I spend it.
UNREAL CONDITION
If I had had money, I
would have spent it.
3. SPECIAL FEATURES
Modal verbs
Main clauses with real conditional tenses can have modal verbs.
If I have money, I can spend it.
You can use could and might instead of would in unreal conditional clauses.
If I had money, I could spend it.
(I would be able to spend it.)
If I had money, I might spend it.
(I would possibly spend it.)
E. MIXED CONDITIONALS
MIXED CONDITIONALS
Unreal conditionals (type II + III) sometimes can be mixed, that is, the time of the if clause is
different from the one of the main clause.
Past --> Present
If I had taken an aspirin, I wouldn't have a headache now.
14
Past --> Future
If I had known that you are going to come by tomorrow, I would be in then.
Present --> Past
If she had enough money, she could have done this trip to Hawaii.
Present --> Future
If I were you, I would be spending my vacation in Seattle.
Future --> Past
If I weren't flying to Detroit, I would have planned a trip to Vancouver.
Future --> Present
If I were taking this exam next week, I would be high-strung.
F.
The word were in the phrase if I were you is special form. It is known as the subjunctive mood
(from the grammatical point of view).
Today you also find the phrase if I was you. Here the Simple Past form of be is used. But there
are people who say that this phrase is incorrect and would never use it (mainly Americans).
Others say that this phrase can be used.
If I were you I would phone him. - subjunctive mood
If I was you I would phone him. - Simple Past
G. WILL AND WOULD IN IF-CLAUSES
1. WILL IN IF-CLAUSES
When the situation or action depicted in the if-clause is a result of the main clause, the will future
is used in the if-clause.
He'll pay me $10 if I'll help him do the dishes.
(Doing the dishes is the result of paying ten dollars.)
2. WOULD IN IF-CLAUSES
15
2. OMITTING IF
3. IF VS. WHEN
if and when are interchangeable when the statement of the conditional clause is a fact or a
general issue (also known as zero conditonal)
If you heat ice, it melts.
When you heat ice, it melts.
when is used for something that, according to the speaker, will happen.
16
I will clean up the kitchen right away when I'm back from work.
4. IN CASE VS. IF
The expression just in case is used pretty much the same way.
I got you a pizza just in case you were hungry.
(I don't know whether you are hungry.)
Despite what you will find in some course books and students grammars, and hear from some
teachers, there is no future tense in English. If we want to refer to future-time situations we can
do this in several ways. In these notes, we look at seven ways.
17
The first five of these are commonly used in both speech and writing:
1. Emma is seeing Luke tomorrow the present progressive, also known as the present
continuous.
2. Emma is going to see Luke tomorrow BE + going to, sometimes referred to as the (BE)
going to future.
3. Emma sees Luke tomorrow the present simple.
4. Emma will see Luke tomorrow - this modal form is sometimes, unhelpfully, called the future
simple.
5. Emma will be seeing Luke tomorrow this modal progressive (or continuous) form is
sometimes, unhelpfully, called the future progressive/continuous.
The last two are used in more restricted contexts:
6. Emma is to see Luke tomorrow BE + to + infinitive.
7. Emma to see Luke tomorrow to- infinitive.
There are also some so-called future perfect constructions, which we will consider at the end of
these notes:
8. Emma will have seen Luke
9. Emma will have been seeing Luke
10. Emma is going to have seen Luke
1. THE PRESENT PROGRESSIVE (ALSO KNOWN AS THE PRESENT
CONTINUOUS)
This form usually refers to a situation that began before the moment of speaking, continues at or
around, and after, the present moment, and into the future, and is of limited duration:
I am writing these notes on the future. (At this moment).
Lindsay is driving to work this week. (She normally goes by bus).
The present progressive can refer to a future situation that has been arranged before the
present time. The arrangement continues through the present until the situation occurs:
Emma is seeing Luke tomorrow, (They arranged this meeting yesterday)
18
Note that only the context or co-text (in the last example the word tomorrow) can tell us which
time-period a present progressive verb form refers to.
Also note that it is simply not possible to make arrangements for some future situations. It is
therefore not normally possible to say XIt is raining tomorrow. X
2. BE + GOING TO
Although you may hear or read that this form indicates present intention, this is not always
true. It is hard to imagine any intention in this sentence: Look at those black clouds; it is going
to rain soon.
BE + going to refers to a future situation for which there is present evidence. In the previous
example, the present evidence is the black clouds. In the following example, the present evidence
may simply be the speakers knowledge that Emma and Luke have arranged the meeting:
Emma is going to see Luke tomorrow.
When the present evidence is an arrangement, then there is, practically speaking, no real
difference in meaning between the present progressive and BE + going to.
3. THE PRESENT SIMPLE
The present simple is frequently used for situations that often or regularly happen. It can
therefore be used for a future situation that is part of a regular series of happenings:
The train for Berlin leaves at midnight tonight.
It is also used for something that is seen as part of a fixed timetable:
The sun rises at 07.34 tomorrow. (We can imagine the speaker thinking of a table of sunrise and
sunset times.)
Emma sees Luke tomorrow. (We can imagine the speaker mentally looking at Emmas diary).
4. THE MODAL WILL + BARE INFINITIVE
The modal auxiliary verb will has a number of possible meanings. Four of the more common are:
a. certainty John left an hour ago, so he will be home by now. (The speaker is certain that John
is home)
b. habitual characteristic: Andrea will sit at her desk for hours without saying a word. (This is
what she often does.)
19
c. volition (willingness): Ill carry your bag for you. (The speaker is offering to carry the bag.)
Fred will carry your bag for you. (The speaker is offering Freds services.)
d. instant decision: What will I do tomorrow? I know! Ill go to the zoo. (The speaker decides to
go to the zoo at the very moment of speaking no plans had been made for this visit.)
Context tells us whether the certainty (a) is about the present, as in the example above, or the
future: Prince Charles will become King when the present Queen dies.
Habitual characteristic (b) is something that is shown regularly. It was observed in the past, can
be observed in the present, and will presumably be observed in the future. It is not possible to
know of a future habitual characteristic, so we do not use this form for purely future reference.
Volition (c), denoting an offer, can refer only to a future situation. Will is normally contracted to
ll.
Instant decisions (d) can be made only about a future situation and, usually, only reported by the
person making the decision. We therefore usually encounter this meaning only with I or we as the
subject. Will is normally contracted to ll.
The word tomorrow in the following sentence tells us that the seeing (meeting) is in the future:
Emma will see Luke tomorrow.
Only context can tell us whether the speaker is certain of the occurrence of the future meeting, or
reporting that Emma is willing to see Luke.
Note that other modals, which have different meanings, can also can also refer to future
situations, for example:
Peter might come over next week. (It is possible that this will happen)
You must finish the report before you go home tonight. (You are obliged to finish the report.) )
You may read in some books that shall is used instead of will when the subject is I or we. Only a
small minority of native speakers use shall other than in questions, and then only for certainty
and instant decision, never for volition or habitual characteristic. Shall is used commonly in
questions:
e) making a suggestion: Shall we go to the pub this evening?
f) asking if the person addressed wants the speaker to do something: Shall I arrange the
publicity?
5. THE MODAL WILL + BE + -ING FORM
20
Progressive forms usually refer to a situation that began before a time point continues through
and after that time point, and into the future, and is of limited duration. The combination of this
idea with the modal will, expressing certainty, leads to the modal will + be + -ing form referring
to a situation beginning before a future time point and continuing through that time point:
Sallys plane takes off from Heathrow at 9 oclock tomorrow, so by about midday she will be
flying over Istanbul.
It is also possible that the speaker is more concerned with the pure certainty of the action
happening than with volitional aspect that might be implied by the use of WILL by itself:
Emma will be seeing Luke tomorrow.
Some writers claim, with some justification, that this use of modal will + a progressive implies,
by its lack of reference to intention, volition or arrangement, a 'casual' future. Depending on the
context and co-text, the speaker may be intending a casual futurity, or may be indicating a
situation in progress at a particular time.
6. BE + TO + INFINITIVE
This form is not common in informal conversation. It refers to something that is to happen in the
future as a plan or decree, normally by some authority other than the subject of the sentence, and
is common in television and radio news reports Thus we are unlikely to hear the first of the
following examples (unless Emma and Luke are the names of well-known singers, actors, etc) .
We might well hear the second:
Emma is to see Luke tomorrow.
Downing Street announced this morning that the Prime Minister is to fly to Washington this
evening for urgent talks about the current crisis.
7. TO- INFINITIVE
This form is common only in newspaper headlines, where editors want to announce the news as
briefly as possible. Once again, we are unlikely to see the first of the following examples (unless
Emma and Luke are the names of well-known singers, actors, etc). We might well see the second:
Emma to see Luke tomorrow.
PM to fly to US.
8. WILL + HAVE + PAST PARTICIPLE (THIRD FORM)
21
When we refer to a future action completed before a later future time, or a future state continuing
up to that later future time, we use will + have + a past participle (third form). This is sometimes
known as the future perfect:
I will have lived here for just over thirteen years when I celebrate my 66th birthday next March.
(At the moment of speaking, six months before next March, the speaker has lived here for
twelve and a half years.)
By the time she leaves Paris tomorrow, Emma will have seen Luke and told him the news. (When
Emma leaves Paris tomorrow, the seeing and telling will be, for her, in the past.)
This form is sometimes known as the future perfect.
9. BE + GOING TO + HAVE + PAST PARTICIPLE (THIRD FORM)
It is possible, though not very common, for a speaker to suggest that there is present evidence of
a future action completed before a later future time, or a future state continuing up to that later
future time, using BE + going to + have + a past participle form (third form):
By the time Emma leaves Paris tomorrow, She is going to have seen Luke and told him the news.
Learners may see/hear this usage, but are recommended to use only 8. will + have + a past
participle (third form), which has practically the same meaning, and is far more commonly used.
10. WILL + HAVE + BEEN + -ING FORM
When we refer to a future action begun before a later future time and continuing through that
later future time, we use will + have + been + -ing form.
By the end of next week, Emma will have been seeing Luke for three months. (She has now, one
week before the end of next week been seeing him for a week less than three months.)
This form is sometimes known as the future perfect continuous.
Important Note.
In many sentences, several of the forms can be used perfectly naturally. The final
subconscious choice of form is made by speakers at the moment of speaking, and depends
on the context of situation as they see it at that moment. Do not think that there is one, and
only one, correct form in any given situation.
22
ANEXO
23
24
25
CONDITIONALS 1
Conditionals are sentences with two clauses an if clause and a main clause that are closely
related. Conditional sentences are often divided into different types.
26
ZERO CONDITIONAL
We use the zero conditional to talk about things that are always true.
We use the first conditional when we talk about real and possible situations.
In first conditional sentences, the structure is usually if + present simple and will + infinitive.
Its not important which clause comes first.
SECOND CONDITIONAL
WHERE WOULD YOU LIVE IF YOU COULD LIVE ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD?
The structure is usually if + past simple and would + infinitive. Its not important which clause
comes first.
Look at the difference between the first and second conditionals.
27
NOTE: Although many conditional sentences use if + will/would, conditional sentences can also
use other words instead of if e.g. when as soon as in case Other modal verbs can be used
instead of will/would e.g. can/could, may might.
Other types of conditional sentences are covered in another section.
28
APPENDIX
How to use particles like 'back', 'on', 'off', 'around', 'up', 'down' or 'out' are
used sometimes with phrasal verbs?
back - return
on - continue
off - travel to another place
around - do a pointless activity
up - complete something/have no more to do
down - (1) put something onto paper, (2) reduce (speed, number, etc.)
out - (1) distribute something amongst people, (2) lose ability to function
For example:
Drink it up (but is there more meanings than finish it)
29
BIBLIOGRAFIA
1. http://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/grammar/if.htm.
2. https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/es/grammarreference/conditionals-1
3. http://www.gramorak.com/Articles/Future.pdf
4. http://www.ncte.org/journals/ej/issues/v100-4
5.