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conditional clause exercises

conditional clause exercises
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conditional clause exercises
Cant find Montalbans Hideout
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 17, 2024 3:41 pm    Post subject: Cant find Montalbans Hideout Reply with quote

I tried to find the stone to start with buttt that didnt work. Anyone that can Help me pls
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 17, 2024 5:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Montalban's hideout can be typically anywhere in (modern day) Mexico or Panama

Monty is usually located in one of these places (in order of probability):
1) North of Vera Cruz,
2) near Villa Hermosa,
3) On the south or southwest coast of Bay of Honduras,
4) the East Coast of Mexico south of modern day Cancun or in Belize.

look for seamarks on the coast
The game often has several landmarks with the same name

Even though they're not on the map they will guide you to Lost Cities and Montalban's Hideout.

It's trial and error when there are more than one in the area. Drop anchor, head inland a bit, and if you see an Arch Rock, Deserted Cabin, Stone Head or Indian Totem you're in the right area. If all you see are geysers and dead trees you're not in the right area. This works well with 1 or 2 map pieces as well.

Another trick is to try to walk through the geysers and dead trees. If you can walk right through them, you are not in the area represented by the map.

Geysers are randomly spread around so not reliable as markers.
Use telescope both while sailing and on land.


Sid Meiers Pirates! Map
https://www.trueachievements.com/customimages/011431.jpg

coastlines in purple are the likely culprits for Lost Cities &
often Montalban's hideout

waters highlighted in red are the most frequent areas to find named pirates.

Map uses the Traditional Nation colors

Dutch - Orange
England - Red
France - Blue
Spain - yellow

Generic help for where is any of the Lost cities or Named pirates
located.


Last edited by corsair91 on Wed Apr 24, 2024 8:48 pm; edited 1 time in total
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conditional clause exercises
corsair91 conditional clause exercises
Sailing Master conditional clause exercises
Posts: 9222 conditional clause exercises
conditional clause exercises
conditional clause exercises
conditional clause exercises
251358 Gold - conditional clause exercises

conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises more...
PostPosted: Wed Apr 24, 2024 2:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

| Pitfall | Example error | Exercise antidote | |---------|---------------|--------------------| | Future in if-clause | “If it will rain, I will stay” | Transform “when/if” sentences; contrast with “when” clauses | | Double would | “If I would be rich, I would travel” | Error correction + contrast with first conditional | | Tense backshift neglect | “If I knew yesterday…” | Time-adverb forced choice: “yesterday” forces past perfect | | Mixed time confusion | “If I had studied, I would be rich” (correct but learner thinks it’s wrong) | Explicit labeling exercises: “Past condition → Present result” | | Overuse of zero conditional | Using zero for one-off future possibilities | Context classification: “Which type fits this real situation?” | A deep essay on exercises must propose a pedagogical sequence. The optimal conditional exercise curriculum follows four stages:

(multiple choice: “Which conditional describes an impossible past?”) Stage 2 – Controlled production (gap-fills with tense clues) Stage 3 – Manipulation (sentence combining: “She didn’t set an alarm. She overslept.” → third conditional) Stage 4 – Free production (role-play: “You are a time traveler. Change one event in history and explain the results.”)

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conditional clause exercises
corsair91 conditional clause exercises
Sailing Master conditional clause exercises
Posts: 9222 conditional clause exercises
conditional clause exercises
conditional clause exercises
conditional clause exercises
251358 Gold - conditional clause exercises

conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises conditional clause exercises more...
PostPosted: Wed Apr 24, 2024 8:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Conditional Clause Exercises !!link!! ❲480p • 360p❳

| Pitfall | Example error | Exercise antidote | |---------|---------------|--------------------| | Future in if-clause | “If it will rain, I will stay” | Transform “when/if” sentences; contrast with “when” clauses | | Double would | “If I would be rich, I would travel” | Error correction + contrast with first conditional | | Tense backshift neglect | “If I knew yesterday…” | Time-adverb forced choice: “yesterday” forces past perfect | | Mixed time confusion | “If I had studied, I would be rich” (correct but learner thinks it’s wrong) | Explicit labeling exercises: “Past condition → Present result” | | Overuse of zero conditional | Using zero for one-off future possibilities | Context classification: “Which type fits this real situation?” | A deep essay on exercises must propose a pedagogical sequence. The optimal conditional exercise curriculum follows four stages:

(multiple choice: “Which conditional describes an impossible past?”) Stage 2 – Controlled production (gap-fills with tense clues) Stage 3 – Manipulation (sentence combining: “She didn’t set an alarm. She overslept.” → third conditional) Stage 4 – Free production (role-play: “You are a time traveler. Change one event in history and explain the results.”)

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