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Ant_222 Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Second-type type conditional vs. Mixed

Hello all,

In the quotation below, the later sentence uses a senond-type conditional, while the 'consequent' is a hypothetical present situation. Isn't this the case for a mixed conditional?

«Still New Bedford is a queer place. Had it not been for us whalemen, that tract of land would this day perhaps have been in as howling condition as the coast of Labrador.»

This is a quotation from Melville's Moby-Dick, so my question is rhetorical and all I am asking for is an explanation...

Thank you in advance,
Anton

P.S. The word D-I-C-K seems to have been removed by the moderator bot...
  

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3 Answers
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All I see is Conditional III: 'Had it not been...that land would have been....'
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Hello, Mister Micawber, and thank you for your reply.
Mister MicawberAll I see is Conditional III: 'Had it not been...that land would have been....'

Yes, type III it is by fact (sorry I called it Type II by dint of mental error). But I wonder why doesn't Mixed conditional fit better:

«Had it not been for us whalemen, that tract of lan
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They both sound natural to me.

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