An advantage of Protasis'proposed instruments is that they would cut out the time and effort now necessary to transport fluid samples for analysis at a laboratory, said David A . Reckhow, professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
22.
The conditional mood is generally found in the independent clause ( " apodosis " ) of a conditional sentence, namely the clause that expresses the result of the condition, rather than the dependent clause ( " protasis " ) expressing the condition.
23.
This form is often found in the protasis and apodosis of unreal conditions, e . g ., " mYn agY ?kbYra bid?bim, xuahal bubosti bim, " " If I were to see / saw / had seen Akbar, I would be happy ".
24.
This is exemplified by the English sentence " If you loved me you would support me " here the conditional " would support " appears in the apodosis, while the protasis ( the condition clause ) uses instead the simple past form " loved ".
25.
Our article conditional mood says " This is exemplified by the English sentence " If you loved me you would support me " here the conditional would support appears in the apodosis, while the protasis ( the condition clause ) uses instead the simple past form loved ."
26.
Vivid future conditional ( future perfect indicative in the protasis, direct question with future indicative in the apodosis; protasis is changed to perfect or pluperfect subjunctive, according to the rules of the Sequence of tenses; apodosis similarly is changed to indirect question with the periphrastic-usus sim / essem ):
27.
Vivid future conditional ( future perfect indicative in the protasis, direct question with future indicative in the apodosis; protasis is changed to perfect or pluperfect subjunctive, according to the rules of the Sequence of tenses; apodosis similarly is changed to indirect question with the periphrastic-usus sim / essem ):
28.
A full conditional sentence ( one which expresses the condition as well as its consequences ) therefore contains two clauses : the dependent clause expressing the condition, called the " "'protasis " "'; and the main clause expressing the consequence, called the " "'apodosis " " '.
29.
He attempts to clarify the issue by arguing that the apodosis of the implication " If Carr is in . . . " are " incorrectly divided . " However, application of the Law of Implication removes the " If . . . " entirely ( reducing to disjunctions ), so no protasis and apodosis exist and no counter-argument is needed.
30.
Here the condition is expressed by the clause " If it rains ", this being the protasis, while the consequence is expressed by " the picnic will be cancelled ", this being the apodosis . ( The protasis may either precede or follow the apodosis; it is equally possible to say " The picnic will be cancelled if it rains " . ) In terms of logic, the protasis corresponds to the antecedent, and the apodosis to the consequent.