 So I will give you an example. If you won the lottery, what would you do? If you won the lottery, what would you do? Anyone? How about Natalia? If you won the lottery, what would you do? Okay, good. So you would buy a boat, right? So the hypothetical or imaginary situation is if you won the lottery, right? So that's imaginary. You did not win the lottery, right? Hopefully you will one day, but you did not win the lottery, right? So if you won the lottery, that hypothetical or imaginary situation, winning the lottery, what would you do? You would buy a boat. So you have that hypothetical or imaginary situation, and then the consequence or the result, which would be buying a boat. You would buy a boat, right? So let me give you maybe one more. So you could say, you could say if I had time, I would, right, help you. So if I had time, that's the imaginary or hypothetical situation, I would help you. So that is the result or the consequence. What you would do if you had that imaginary situation, what you would do. So both of them are imaginary. If this happened, I would do this. So let's go over the form of the second conditional, okay? So it goes like this. If plus simple past. So if plus the simple past, and then we have the would or the wouldn't. You see that here, right? The would or the wouldn't. And then plus the base form of the verb, right? So if, let's look at the example we had before. If I had time, so the simple past had, right? So if I had time, okay? Now where is the base form in the consequence?