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  1. 28 de nov. de 2011 · Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  2. Possible Duplicate: “If I was” or “If I were”. Which is more common, and which is correct?

  3. I have taught English language, and we do refer to this as the 2nd conditional. It is used for imaginary future events and is formed with "would" and the past simple (to put it simply). eg "What would you do if you had a million dollars?"

  4. But (just think, if they did) they might become great musicians.'. I think #1 should be thought of as short for "What if they would become great musicians (if they attended that school)". To my ear, it's better than #2. But really, the sentence should be rewritten.

  5. 9. In your specific case, neither 'was' nor 'were' is best; you should say "if it is running". "If it were running" is subjunctive case, used to describe hypothetical situations: "If it were running, I would stop it first, but it's already stopped." "If it was running" is a common corruption of subjunctive case, or, as described in the other ...

  6. 6 de dic. de 2012 · Questions of attribute which and what: We usually use which when we are asking about a fixed or limited number of things or people, and what when we are not.

  7. The most obvious word that comes to mind is " hypotheticals ". It does not refer to exclusively positive or negative scenarios, but to any imagined, "what if" scenarios. From Wikipedia: Hypotheticals are situations, statements or questions about something imaginary rather than something real. Hypotheticals deal with the concept of "what if?"'.

  8. I live in Sweden and work as a translator. A translation agency just asked me for an offer. Their reply (in Swedish) to my offer was, "Thank you, we'll let you know if and when the end-customer accepts your offer."

  9. This predicts a likely event: running will certainly allow you to catch the train. Second Conditional: 'If you ran, you would catch the train.'. This suggests that the person addressed is unlikely to run. Third Conditional: 'If you had run, you would have caught the train.'. The person addressed didn’t run. Share.

  10. Learn the best practices for greeting multiple recipients in an e-mail from the experts and peers on English Language & Usage Stack Exchange.

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