A structure that is parallel.
Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana. Parallel structure is when the sentence is basically the same with different words. The structure of the sentence is the same in both cases. The words of the sentence may be different in both cases.
A hexagon has three pairs of parallel sides. A pentagon has no lines parallel. Above answer is correct but only if they are regular hexagon and pentagons. A non-regular hexagon can have as little as none parallel lines. A non-regular pentagon can have two parallel lines.
False!
Parallel structure is not part of grammar, except to the extent that there are syntactic rules, like Conjunction Reduction, that apply to structures that are syntactically parallel. They're always optional rules, though, and there's no grammatical requirement to use parallel structures. They're awfully useful, though, as you point out -BrainQuiz
Yes, an example of parallel structure in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is "He gloried in getting the best of them, in his little battles." In this sentence, the repeated use of "in" followed by a gerund phrase creates a parallel structure, emphasizing Tom's enjoyment of triumphing over others.
A structure that is parallel.
parallel.
the little prince
a parallel is data structure for representing array of records.
The little prince meets the narrator in the Sahara Desert after he crashes his plane there.
ben-dan "little prince"
Little Prince - chief - died in 1832.
words, phrases, or sentences that have the same grammatical structure
Bish Whet?
The Little Prince tames the Fox.
run