Kamis, 20 April 2017

My Plans

A lot of people out there who ask "after graduating college would like to continue where? Work? College Graduate or married? " question for the sake of the question always makes me think, wondering to myself, " if I could? Am I able to embody a hope? " all the answers do exist in yourself.
The main thing I wanted to accomplish was graduated on time, being a Bachelor. A Bachelor's of Economics. So I've made my parents proud. Yes, scholars. Toga dress I would wear it later is evidence of the seriousness of the me in reaching my goals. No doubt it will replace any sweat and tears of both my parents. Parents sacrifice, sweat, tears and a sense of tired and jaded will disappear when my time comes later wearing a toga and officially became a scholar. After graduating from S1 I will work and raising capital for the business. Employee is my stepping stone to get enough capital to build its own efforts.
My plan in the future is I want to open a Cafe. I will try from the ground with minimal capital as possible. Cafe that will I developed into advanced and have a lot of employees, so as to be able to open branches in other cities. My dream which I will make later is to become entrepreneurs, spend old age by providing salary, not receiving a salary.


Rabu, 12 April 2017

CONDITIONAL SENTENCE

Conditional tenses are used to speculate about what could happen, what might have happened, and what we wish would happen. In English, most sentences using the conditional contain the word if. Many conditional forms in English are used in sentences that include verbs in one of the past tenses. This usage is referred to as "the unreal past" because we use a past tense but we are not actually referring to something that happened in the past. There are five main ways of constructing conditional sentences in English. In all cases, these sentences are made up of an if clause and a main clause. In many negative conditional sentences, there is an equivalent sentence construction using "unless" instead of "if".
Conditional sentence type
Usage
If clause verb tense
Main clause verb tense
Zero
General truths
Simple present
Simple present
Type 1
A possible condition and its probable result
Simple present
Simple future
Type 2
A hypothetical condition and its probable result
Simple past
Present conditional or Present continuous conditional
Type 3
An unreal past condition and its probable result in the past
Past perfect
Perfect conditional
Mixed type
An unreal past condition and its probable result in the present
Past perfect
Present contditional

The zero conditional
The zero conditional is used for when the time being referred to is now or always and the situation is real and possible. The zero conditional is often used to refer to general truths. The tense in both parts of the sentence is the simple present. In zero conditional sentences, the word "if" can usually be replaced by the word "when" without changing the meaning.
If clause
Main clause
If + simple present
   simple present
If this thing happens
   that thing happens.
If you heat ice
    it melts.
If it rains
    the grass gets wet.


Type 1 conditional
The type 1 conditional is used to refer to the present or future where the situation is real. The type 1 conditional refers to a possible condition and its probable result. In these sentences the if clause is in the simple present, and the main clause is in the simple future.
If clause
Main clause
If + simple present
simple future
If this thing happens
that thing will happen.
If you don't hurry
you will miss the train.
If it rains today
you will get wet.


Type 2 conditional
The type 2 conditional is used to refer to a time that is now or any time, and a situation that is unreal. These sentences are not based on fact. The type 2 conditional is used to refer to a hypothetical condition and its probable result. In type 2 conditional sentences, the if clause uses the simple past, and the main clause uses the present conditional.
If clause
Main clause
If + simple past
present conditional or present continuous conditional
If this thing happened
that thing would happen. (but I'm not sure this thing will happen) OR that thing would be happening.
If you went to bed earlier
you would not be so tired.
If it rained
you would get wet.
If I spoke Italian
I would be working in Italy.


Type 3 conditional
The type 3 conditional is used to refer to a time that is in the past, and a situation that is contrary to reality. The facts they are based on are the opposite of what is expressed. The type 3 conditional is used to refer to an unreal past condition and its probable past result. In type 3 conditional sentences, the if clause uses the past perfect, and the main clause uses the perfect conditional.
If clause
Main clause
If + past perfect
perfect conditional or perfect continuous conditional
If this thing had happened
that thing would have happened. (but neither of those things really happened) OR
that thing would have been happening.
If you had studied harder
you would have passed the exam.
If it had rained
you would have gotten wet.
If I had accepted that promotion
I would have been working in Milan.

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