Yes, the word parallel is a noun, a word for a person or thing that is similar or analogous to another.
The word parallel is also a verb and an adjective. Example uses:
Noun: The parallel of events made the mystery more difficult to unravel.
Verb: We need someone whose experience will parallel your own.
Adjective: The parallel handrails will accommodate people of different heights.
yes they are parallel!
The following adjectives describing trapezoids are in bold type, and are listed preceding the noun being qualified: plane geometry, quadrilateral figure, parallel sides, unequal length, perpendiculardistance, equal length, isoscelestrapezoid.
Yes, light bulbs can be powered by a parallel circuit.
calendar = noun and verb heavens = noun, plural archaeologist = noun Winnebago = noun, proper written mathematics = adjective + noun the hickory fort = article + noun + noun (the noun 'hickory' used to describe the noun 'fort' is functioning as a noun adjunct)
The word terror is a noun. It is mostly an uncountable noun.
The word "parallel" can function as both a noun and an adjective.
noun
The word "parallel" can function as both an adjective and a noun. As an adjective, it describes things that are side-by-side and equally distant at all points. As a noun, it refers to lines or planes that run alongside each other and never intersect.
"Quay" functions as a noun and is used to refer to a structure built parallel to the shoreline for docking ships or loading and unloading cargo.
I dont know if this helps"But then you have a problem with parallel structure--a gerund and a noun."
Here are some examples of parallel and non-parallel sentences:I like finding Internet questions, answering Internet questions, and reading the responses. (parallel)When I find an internet questions, I answer them and read the a response. (not parallel).Note how the bold words repeat the same structure as gerunds... (verb, adjective, noun).The second sentence has no similar structure and contains errors.
Here are some examples of parallel and non-parallel sentences:I like finding Internet questions, answering Internet questions, and reading the responses. (parallel)When I find an internet questions, I answer them and read the a response. (not parallel).Note how the bold words repeat the same structure as gerunds... (verb, adjective, noun).The second sentence has no similar structure and contains errors.
Yes, the word grid is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a framework of crisscrossed or parallel bars; a grating or mesh; a set of wires that carries the electricity supply; a network of synchronized power providers and consumers that are connected by transmission and distribution lines; a word for a thing.
Yes. It is a form of the noun horizon. It refers to the dimension that is parallel to the Earth's surface (i.e. sideways) rather than vertical (up and down).
Heptagonal is an adjective: the answer depends on the noun that it refers to. A heptagonal pyramid, a heptagonal dipyramid or a heptagonal prism or some other heptagonal shape?
If they were not actually parallel then they would not be parallel lines!
parallel