English Grammar in Use · Murphy

Intermediate Grammar

Master English grammar one unit at a time. Clear notes, then 40+ interactive exercises with instant feedback — based on the topics in English Grammar in Use (Intermediate).

UNIT 39 · Intermediate · B1–B2

If I knew … and I wish I knew …“if + past (imaginary now) · wish + past” — 44 interactive questions

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📖 Grammar Reference — If I knew … and I wish I knew …

Study the notes, then work through the six exercises.

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What you’ll learnif + past for an imaginary situation now · the past = “imagine”, not past time · were for advice · wish + past = I regret it now
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~15 minNotes + 6 exercises
44 questionsInstant feedback

A If I knew… — imagine something that isn’t true now

If + past simple , would / could + base verb

Use this when the situation is not real now — it’s only imagined. The verb after if is past, but the meaning is present:

not true nowIf I knew his number, I’d call him. (I don’t know it)
imaginedIf we had a car, we could drive. (we don’t)
a questionWhat would you do if you won?

💡 No would in the if-part: If I would know…If I knew…

B The past after if means “imagine”, not past time

Don’t read knew · had · lived as real past actions. They simply paint an unreal present:

If I had more time… imagine nowbut I don’t have time today.
If you lived here… imagine nowbut you don’t live here.
imaginary If I saw a ghost, I would run. ✓
not past Yesterday, if I saw…

C If I were… — and giving advice

In imaginary sentences we often use were for every subject (I / he / she / it). This is the natural way to give advice with If I were you…:

advice If I were you, I’d rest. ✓
imaginary If he were taller, he’d play. ✓

💡 Use were (not am) for advice — never If I am you.

D I wish I knew… — I’m sorry it isn’t true

I wish + past simple / could

Use wish + past to say you regret something about now — you’d like it to be different:

regret a factI wish I knew Paul’s number. (I don’t)
wish you couldDo you ever wish you could fly?
wish it were differentI wish it didn’t rain so much.

💡 I wish I know / I wish I canI wish I knew · I wish I could.

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RememberIf + past simple … would/could + base = imagine a situation that isn’t true now · the past after if means “imagine”, not past time · use were for advice (If I were you…) · wish + past = I regret it now (I wish I knew = I don’t know and I’m sorry). Never if I would know and never I wish I can.

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Original practice material inspired by the English Grammar in Use syllabus (Cambridge University Press). Example sentences and exercises are written by All English 4U.