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I've heard a lot about conditional grammar and how the word 'would' plays a role in those structures, but sometimes I run into this word out of conditional structures. For example :
A: I told her a lie about my family.
B: Why would you lie about that?
I'm confused in understanding such usage of "would".
Could you explain to me what kind of structure this is ?
+1 for the context you found, a conditional that talks (asks in present) about a past event. I have never seen it in any grammar book. Nevertheless, many people would say you should have used past conditional, that is, why would you have lied about that, as the lie was told in the past. – Lucian Sava – 2016-11-06T09:31:41.583
A similar question being discussed here: Why would she do this? Have a look.
– tum_ – 2016-11-06T10:07:11.5132It's the same as asking, "Why would anyone lie about their family?" Past conditionals of that kind denote something done on a general, past-present-and-future basis. – Ricky – 2016-11-07T19:10:06.433