📖 Lesson B1 Grammar📐 Grammar

🔀 Summit: First vs Second Choice

The crew plans a filming trip with real if-sentences, then dreams with imaginary ones — and one quiet sentence shows how grammar signals belief. Learners contrast if + present + will with if + past + would, apply the belief test to choose between them, and avoid the classic will/would-after-if traps.

🎒 Teens (11–16) schedule 45 min signal_cellular_alt Medium
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view_agenda Lesson Plan

  • One real weekend plan with if
  • One weekend dream that will not happen
  • Which believes more: if I win or if I won?

translate Key Vocabulary

likelyrealisticforecastdepend onchanceprizevalleyridgebackupdecision

auto_fix_high Grammar Points

  • First conditional: if + present simple, will + verb (real/likely)
  • Second conditional: if + past simple, would + verb (imaginary/unlikely)
  • Never will or would inside the if-clause
  • The speaker’s belief chooses the conditional

arrow_upward Prerequisites

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