It's a compound word, "along" and "side".
No. Example: I will make my bed along with doing the dishes.
alongside
The word 'cum' in this context derives from the Latin word cum which means 'with' or in this context 'alongside with' i.e. the person IS something alongside something else e'g. an actor and singer.
It means that, it involves two plates sliding alongside one another.
You don't say if this is writing about parables in general or about some specific parable.However you could start by saying where the word parable comes from: Greek word, two parts one meaning alongside and the other to throw or castand then define what a parable is:a parable is an illustration to explain a truth, a parable puts something familiar alongside something unfamiliar
Para : "Beside , near , alongside . . . Sol: Sun - near or alongside the Sun .
The word "sidebar" usually applies to a courtroom conference with the judge that is usually not recorded, as in an "aside". In publishing, it refers to a separate, usually supplementary article or explanation alongside an article or story.
A parable is a simple story illustrating a moral or religious lesson. The word parable is a compound word made up of two parts one meaning alongside and the other to throw or cast. In English we use one of the words as a prefix - para eg. paramedics, or we talk about parachurch organisations A parable is an illustration thrown in alongside of a truth in order to explain it, to make the truth easier to understand. A parable puts something familiar alongside something unfamiliar, it compares something unfamiliar with something familiar. A parable is similar to a fable or an allegory or a proverb
This is known as a transform boundary.
no it is not an one word it is of two word
I think the word "ongoing" is only one word, but it has two syllables that are two separate words.
The word "hairbrush" is typically written as one word, not two.