Parallelism means that items that form a pair (two items) or items that form a series (more than two items) have the same grammatical structure (are worded the same way). Lack of parallel structure occurs when parts of a sentence should be in parallel grammatical structure (should be worded the same way) but are not.
Lack of parallel structure occurs when parts of a sentence should be in parallel grammatical structure (should be worded the same way) but are not. 1- In the following pairs, one sentence has parallel structure, and the other sentence lacks parallel structure. Which sentence is correct?
Parallel : I came; I saw; I conquered. Here we have three independent clauses (word groups that can stand alone as sentences) in a row with each of them in the simple past tense using the same pronoun. It would be a very different quote if parallelism were not present. Not Parallel: I came; I saw; they were conquered.
Not Parallel: I came; I saw; they were conquered. The introduction of the new pronoun, they, is jarring and disrupts the flow of ideas. Smaller parts of sentences should also be parallel.
D. There seems to be an interruption in the sentence at "then cooking will begin"
Answer: D) I am going to go to the store, shop for ingredients, then cooking will begin.
Now that you know what prose is, identify which of the following items are prose. Which of the following are examples of prose? A. The Hunger Games bo …
Parallelism is the idea that parts of a sentence such as items in a series should be phrased in the same grammatical way. The famous quote of Julius Caesar is good example of why parallelism is so powerful.
Not Parallel: I like going to the beach, to go out to eat, and going to the movies.
Sometimes, it is difficult to see the parts of a sentence that should be parallel. Can you see the nonparallel part of the next sentence?