Conditionals are used to express both real, likely and unreal situations. As a result, tenses used with them are not flat; they change. That is why the difference between ‘If I arrive’ and ‘If I had ...
There’s an old “rule” about “if” and “whether.” It says, basically, that “if” is for conditional clauses and “whether” is for situations in which two alternatives are possible. “If you go to the store ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Abstract Conditional clauses are underresearched in sign languages, and the research that has been done has mostly employed elicited data. The current ...
James Chen, CMT is an expert trader, investment adviser, and global market strategist. Somer G. Anderson is CPA, doctor of accounting, and an accounting and finance professor who has been working in ...
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