C1 Mixed Time Frames – Test 1 | Advanced Grammar Practice for IELTS, TOEFL, YDS
Challenge your mastery of mixed time frames in advanced English grammar with this C1-level test designed for IELTS, TOEFL, and YDS preparation. Detailed explanations analyze structure, meaning logic, rhetorical nuance, and common high-level traps.
Choose the most grammatically and logically appropriate option in each sentence.
This test focuses on mixed time reference structures, including:
Past cause → present result
Hypothetical past → present reality
Present assumption → past deduction
Future in the past
Narrative sequencing with tense shift
All explanations are provided in one detailed section after the questions.
RESULTS
#1. If the research team ______ the preliminary data more carefully, the current model would be more reliable.
#2. She looks as though she ______ all night preparing for the conference.
#3. Had the policy been implemented earlier, the economy ______ now in a stronger position.
#4. If he were more attentive in meetings, he ______ the mistake yesterday.
#5. They would have completed the project by now if funding ______ withdrawn last year.
#6. She speaks as if she ______ the results before the official announcement.
#7. If I had realized how complex the issue was, I ______ a different approach now.
#8. Had he not underestimated the risks, the company ______ facing litigation today.
#9. If the data were accurate, the researchers ______ different conclusions last year.
#10. She would be leading the department now if she ______ the offer in 2020.
#11. If the committee had acted sooner, public trust ______ at present.
#12. Had the experiment been conducted properly, the findings ______ more credible now.
#13. If he had invested more wisely, he ______ financial difficulties at the moment.
#14. She behaves as though she ______ the proposal, although she joined the team recently.
#15. If the infrastructure were more efficient, the crisis last winter ______ less severe.
✅ Detailed Explanations (All Answers Explained)
Question 1 — A ✓
Structure: Third conditional (past condition) + present result → mixed conditional
Form: If + past perfect → would + base verb (present result)
Meaning Logic:
The past failure (not analyzing data carefully) affects present reliability. Therefore, past cause → present consequence.
Why B fails:
“Analyzed” creates a second conditional (present unreal), but context clearly refers to past data.
Why C fails:
“Would analyze” incorrectly places modal in the if-clause.
Exam Note:
Mixed conditionals are common in IELTS Writing Task 2 cause-effect arguments.
Question 2 — B ✓
Structure: “Looks as though” + past perfect for unreal past inference.
Meaning Logic:
She did not actually study all night; this is a present impression about a past action.
Why C fails:
“Has been studying” suggests real possibility, not hypothetical inference.
Why A fails:
Simple present mismatches time reference.
Rhetorical Effect:
Creates evaluative distance — common in academic commentary.
Question 3 — A ✓
Structure: Inverted third conditional (Had + past participle) → present result.
Meaning Logic:
Earlier policy (past) → current economic condition (present).
Why C fails:
“Would have been” suggests past result, but sentence refers to now.
Exam Note:
Inversion (“Had the policy…”) is common in formal TOEFL readings.
Question 4 — B ✓
Structure: Present condition → past result (mixed conditional).
Logic:
He is generally inattentive (present trait), which caused yesterday’s mistake.
Why A fails:
Refers to present/future mistake.
Why C fails:
Future meaning conflicts with “yesterday.”
Question 5 — A ✓
Structure: Past condition → present result (“by now”).
Logic:
Funding withdrawal happened last year (past), influencing current incomplete project.
Why B/C fail:
Wrong tense for completed past event.
Question 6 — A ✓
Structure: “As if” + past simple → unreal present implication.
Logic:
She did not know before announcement; speaker implies pretended certainty.
Why B fails:
Present perfect indicates real knowledge.
Why C fails:
Modal inappropriate after “as if.”
Question 7 — C ✓
Structure: Past unreal condition → present progressive result.
Logic:
Past realization would influence current behavior.
Why B fails:
Would have adopted = completed past, not ongoing present effect.
Why A fails:
Simple present result too weak.
Question 8 — A ✓
Structure: Inverted third conditional → present progressive result.
Logic:
Past underestimation → current legal trouble.
Why C fails:
Would not have been = past result.
Question 9 — B ✓
Structure: Present unreal condition → past result.
Logic:
Data were inaccurate (past), affecting past conclusions.
Why A fails:
Would draw = present.
Question 10 — A ✓
Structure: Past unreal condition → present role.
Logic:
Not accepting in 2020 affects present leadership.
Classic IELTS trap:
Temporal mismatch between “now” and “in 2020.”
Question 11 — C ✓
Structure: Past unreal → present state.
Logic:
Earlier action affects current public trust.
Why B fails:
Would have increased = finished past.
Question 12 — A ✓
Structure: Past experiment → present credibility.
Meaning Logic:
Credibility is evaluated now.
Question 13 — C ✓
Structure: Past financial decision → present difficulty.
Why B fails:
Would have avoided = only past.
Question 14 — A ✓
Structure: “As though” + past simple → unreal present implication.
Meaning:
She did not draft proposal; speaker criticizes.
Rhetorical effect:
Mild irony.
Question 15 — B ✓
Structure: Present unreal condition → past result.
Logic:
Infrastructure inefficiency (ongoing state) affected last winter crisis.






