Conditional sentences are sentences expressing
factual implications,
or hypothetical situations and their consequences.
They are so called because the validity of the main clause of the sentence is conditional on
the existence of certain circumstances, which may be expressed in a dependent clause or may be understood
from the context.
A full
conditional sentence (one which expresses the condition as well as its
consequences) therefore contains two clauses: the dependent clause expressing the condition,
called the protasis; and the
main clause expressing the consequence, called the apodosis. An example of such a sentence (in English) is the following:
If it rains, the picnic will be
cancelled.
Here the
condition is expressed by the clause "If it rains", this being the
protasis, while the consequence is expressed by "the picnic will be
cancelled", this being the apodosis. (The protasis may either precede or
follow the apodosis; it is equally possible to say "The picnic will be
cancelled if it rains".) In terms of logic,
the protasis corresponds to theantecedent,
and the apodosis to the consequent.
Languages
use a variety of grammatical forms and constructions in conditional sentences.
The forms of verbs used in the protasis and
apodosis are often subject to particular rules as regards their tense and mood. Many languages have a specialized
type of verb form called the conditional mood – broadly equivalent
in meaning to the English "would (do something)" – for use in some
types of conditional sentence.
0 Komentar