11.3 |
Conditional Sentences |
Conditional
sentences refer to future situations where one event is conditional
on another event. They take the form “If X happens, then Y will
happen.” Note that every conditional sentence has two parts, the
“if clause” and the “result cause.” In English, the if
clause is usually in the present tense and the result clause
is usually in the future tense. In Hindi, however, we have three
ways to translate the sentence:
|
If he
comes, |
then I will
give him the book. |
|
if
clause |
result
clause |
A. |
अगर वह
आएगा |
तो मैं
उसे किताब दूँगा। |
B. |
अगर वह
आए |
तो मैं
उसे किताब दूँगा। |
C. |
अगर वह
आए |
तो मैं
उसे किताब दूँ। |
Choices A and
B have more or less the same meaning. In choices C, the use of the
optative tense in the result clause makes the meaning a little more
“wishy-washy.” Sentence C could be translated “If he comes then I
might give him the book.”
Note: The
the combination “If [future], then [optative]” is not allowed. The
following chart shows the three allowed combinations:
If Clause |
Result
Clause |
future |
future |
optative |
future |
optative |
optative |
 |
See Snell's
Teach Yourself Hindi (2000) Section 10.4 page
129 |
|