Conditional Sentences Exercises Multiple Choice Exclusive May 2026

Mastering English Grammar: The Ultimate Guide to Conditional Sentences Exercises (Multiple Choice Exclusive)

Unlock 50+ High-Yield Practice Questions with Answer Keys & Detailed Explanations

Conditional sentences are the backbone of fluent, sophisticated English. They allow you to express possibilities, hypotheticals, regrets, and cause-effect relationships. Yet, for many learners—from intermediate ESL students to advanced test-takers (IELTS, TOEFL, Cambridge)—conditionals remain a persistent challenge. conditional sentences exercises multiple choice exclusive

Why? Because most practice materials are either too basic or too scattered. You find five questions here, ten there, with no structure or exclusivity. Mastering English Grammar: The Ultimate Guide to Conditional

That changes now. Welcome to your Exclusive Multiple Choice Drill on conditional sentences. This isn’t just another quiz. This is a meticulously designed, high-density practice session featuring 50+ original, scenario-driven questions across all four conditional types—plus mixed conditionals—complete with an answer key and razor-sharp explanations you won’t find anywhere else. Part 4: Answer Key with Detailed Explanations The


Part 4: Answer Key with Detailed Explanations

The Ultimate Guide to Conditional Sentences

Conditional sentences describe the result of a condition. They usually consist of two clauses: the If-clause (the condition) and the Main clause (the result).

Next Steps: From Exercises to Fluency

Conditional sentences are not just grammar—they are logic games. Once you master them, you unlock:

Download our exclusive PDF version (link below) containing all 50+ questions plus 5 bonus exercises on mixed conditionals with modals (could, might, should).


Section A Answers:

  1. B – Zero conditional: facts.
  2. A – First conditional: possible future.
  3. A – "Unless" = if not.
  4. A – Zero conditional (scientific fact).
  5. C – First conditional.
  6. B – First conditional in question form.
  7. A – Zero conditional (general truth).
  8. C – Time clause (as soon as) + future result.
  9. A – Zero conditional (general cause-effect).
  10. B – First conditional.
  11. C – First conditional.
  12. B – Zero conditional (habit).
  13. A – First conditional.
  14. B – "In case of" triggers present simple.
  15. A – "Provided that" = if (first conditional).