[Grammar] If I won the lottery, I could...

Status
Not open for further replies.

NAL123

Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2020
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Hindi
Home Country
India
Current Location
India
Consider this sentence of mine:

1) If I won the lottery, I could buy a 20-room mansion.

Does sentence 1) imply:

I can't buy a 20-room mansion, because I won't win the lottery.
 
No.

It only implies that winning the lottery would enable you to buy a mansion. There is nothing in the sentence that states that a lottery win is your only possible source of money.
 
No.

It only implies that winning the lottery would enable you to buy a mansion. There is nothing in the sentence that states that a lottery win is your only possible source of money.

Is this sentence possible?

1) If I won the lottery, I might buy a 20-room mansion.
 
Consider this sentence of mine:

1) If I won the lottery, I could buy a 20-room mansion.

Does sentence 1) imply:

I can't buy a 20-room mansion, because I won't win the lottery.

No, for the reasons PeterCW gave in post 2. It does, however, imply that you currently do not have enough money to buy a 20-room mansion (if you did, you probably would have bought one by now). We use the conditional when we are simply considering something as a possible happening, and that's when we use the simple past form in the "If" clause. It refers to any and all unspecified dates in the future.

If I won ... I would ...

When we're really considering the possibility of something happening, we change the form to:

If I win ... I will ...

There, it's likely to be used with some kind of time marker, such as:

If I win the lottery next week, I will buy you a plane.
 

I'm a bit confused about "might" in conditional sentences:

I might go to the beach if the sun was shining.

I might go with you to the market if I wasn't ill.

I might do better if I had a different teacher.

Are they all correct?
 
I take it that you realise that might sentences do not mean the same as would sentences.

I think "could" sentences are much more similar to "would" sentences. Am I right?

I could go to the beach if the sun were shining.

I could go with you to the market if I wasn't ill.

I could do better if I had a different teacher.
 
3. I could go to the beach if the sun were shining

In the hypothetical/counterfactual situation of the sun shining:

3a = #2,
3b = my ability to go to the beach is presented as a possibility

Of 3a) and 3b), I think 3b) would be normally understood if sentence 3) were given. Am I right?
 
It would depend on the context.

Last question:

In post #9, the 3a) interpretation doesn't have any "ability" meaning at all. Is this correct?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top