Respuestas
Respuesta:
Tom: What would you do if you won the lottery, Nick?
Nick: Hm. I guess I’d buy a house on the beach. Maybe in Marbella.
Tom: Really? Marbella?
Nick: Yeah. Well, I’ve never been to Marbella, actually. But I’ve heard it’s nice.
Tom: Would you keep working if you had that much money?
Nick: No, of course not. If I won a few million, the first thing I’d do is quit my job.
Tom: And would you just move to Spain?
Nick: Well, maybe I’d come back to the UK for summer… all three days of it!
Tom: And what would you do if you lived in Spain?
Nick: You know, the usual things… eat fish, drink beer, sit around on the beach, ogle the locals. I can see it now…
Tom: Sounds nice.
Nick: Yeah! So, what would you do if you won the lottery?
Tom: I’d invest the money and I’d use the interest to travel around the world. You know I have cousins in Australia who I haven’t seen since I was a kid?
Nick: Oh wow…
Explicación:
lo entregué yo para mi clase no em acuerdo sie es de google o que pero la miss me dijo que estaba bien
Respuesta:
oy, a conversation with the second conditional.
If you've been following me for a long time, you know we've already covered the different types of conditionals around here.
And you know that the first conditional is used for more probable things. Well, the second conditional is for hypothetical, improbable or unreal situations.
More here, if you want a longer explanation: first conditional and second conditional
To review, the second conditional has the following form:
If + past simple, it would be + infinitive.
Or vice versa:
It would be + infinitive if + simple past.
The simple past in these cases does not refer to the literal past, but to the hypothetical idea of the verb. This is the subjunctive in Spanish.
That is why today we are going to see a couple of conversations with the second conditional, which talk about hypothetical or unreal situation
Explicación: espero averte ayudado