Parallel Construction, Study notes of Construction

Parallel construction, also called parallelism, shows that two or more ideas are equally important by stating them in grammatically parallel.

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16.1 WHY CHOOSE PARALLELISM?
Parallel construction,also called parallelism,shows that two or more
ideas are equally important by stating them in grammatically parallel
form: noun lined up with noun, verb with verb, phrase with phrase. Paral-
lelism can lend clarity, elegance, and symmetry to what you say:
I came;
I saw;
I conquered.
—Julius Caesar
Using three simple verbs to list the things he did, Caesar makes coming,
seeing, and conquering all equal in importance. He also implies that for
him, conquering was as easy as coming and seeing.
In many ways writing is the act of saying I,
of imposing oneself upon
other people,
of saying listen to me,
see it my way,
change your
mind.
—Joan Didion
Didion gives equal importance to saying I, imposing oneself, and voicing
certain commands. Furthermore, she builds one parallel construction into
another. Using a series of imperative verbs, she puts equal weight on listen,
see, and change. The result is a rhetorically commanding definition of the
act of writing.
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Parallel Construction
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16.1 WHY CHOOSE PARALLELISM?

Parallel construction, also called parallelism, shows that two or more

ideas are equally important by stating them in grammatically parallel

form: noun lined up with noun, verb with verb, phrase with phrase. Paral-

lelism can lend clarity, elegance, and symmetry to what you say:

I came;

I saw;

I conquered. —Julius Caesar

Using three simple verbs to list the things he did, Caesar makes coming,

seeing, and conquering all equal in importance. He also implies that for

him, conquering was as easy as coming and seeing.

In many ways writing is the act of saying I, of imposing oneself upon other people, of saying listen to me, see it my way, change your mind. —Joan Didion

Didion gives equal importance to saying I, imposing oneself, and voicing

certain commands. Furthermore, she builds one parallel construction into

another. Using a series of imperative verbs, she puts equal weight on listen,

see, and change. The result is a rhetorically commanding definition of the

act of writing.

Parallel Construction

We look for signs in every strange event; we search for heroes in every un- known face. —Alice Walker

Walker stresses our searching by making the second half of this sentence

exactly parallel with the first.

16.2 WRITING PARALLEL CONSTRUCTIONS

To write parallel constructions, put two or more coordinate items into the

same grammatical form:

I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears, and sweat. —Winston Churchill

Churchill uses four nouns to identify what he offers the British people in

wartime.

... and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth. —Abraham Lincoln

Lincoln uses three prepositional phrases to describe the essential character-

istics of American democracy.

On all these shores there are echoes of past and future: of the flow of time, obliterating yet containing all that has gone before. —Rachel Carson

Carson uses two prepositional phrases about time, and then a pair of

participles to contrast its effects.

We must indeed all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately. —Benjamin Franklin

Franklin uses two parallel clauses to stress the difference between two

equally pressing alternatives.

A living dog is better than a dead lion. —Ecclesiastes

The likeness in form between the two phrases lets us clearly see how much

they differ in meaning.

Parallel Construction writ 16.

16.4 EDITING FAULTY PARALLELISM

When two or more parts of a sentence are parallel in meaning, you should

coordinate them fully by making them parallel in form. If you don’t, the

faulty parallelism may jar your reader:

£ The Allies decided to invade Italy and then that they would launch a

massive assault on the Normandy coast.

Here are further examples:

£ I like swimming, skiing, and to hike in the mountains.

£ [or] I like swimming, skiing, and to hike in the mountains.

£ Either we must make nuclear power safe or stop using it.

£ [or] Either we must make nuclear power safe or stop using it.

In sentences made with correlatives, each correlative goes just before one

of the parallel items.

£ The more I see of men, I find dogs more likable. —Madame de Staël

£ My idea of heaven is a great big baked potato, and I would like

someone to share it with. —Oprah Winfrey

£ They fought in the streets, the fields, and in the woods.

In a series of phrases beginning with a word such as to or in, repeat the

word before each phrase or don’t repeat it at all after the first one (in the

streets, the fields, and the woods).

Parallel Construction fault 16.

to

^

hiking

to swim, ski, ^

^ (^) , we must

W either ^^

^ ^

the more likable

^ ^

.

in ^

back^15 17 next

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