Well, this question is unclear ... that's obvious!
I think you are asking what some problems might be when comparing two things - anything you write where you are not really comparing them would make it unclear. For example, if you are comparing the "save" and the "cancel" buttons from this site, tossing in a statement that "you can spell check your answer" would make your point unclear.
'And so my fellow Americans, ask not, what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country.Or, for example, antithetical parallelism is the repetition of terms of a poetic couplet in meaning, such as in "the thoughts of the righteous are right, but the counselsof the wicked are deceitful".
You may be referring to the parallelism in the Hebrew Bible. In the system used by the Bible verses, many (but not all) of them are in two halves which parallel each other with similar (but not identical) thoughts. Look up any chapter in Proverbs (for example) to see this.
An author might use parallelism to emphasize key ideas or create a sense of balance and rhythm in their writing. Emotional diction can be used to evoke a specific emotional response in the reader or to add depth and intensity to the tone of the piece. Both techniques can help enhance the message and impact of the author's writing.
Yes thought(s) is a noun so can be the subject of a sentence. Thoughts are ideas that you have in your mind.
Syntactic parallelism is a rhetorical device often used in poetry and song. It is characterized by repetition in adjacent clauses and sentences. This repetition recounts a theme within the work.
You can tell that a sentence is part of the author's thoughts because the sentence shares the author's thoughts about ideas in the sources and It introduces the author's ideas about the theme.
Sentence groups of words that express complete thoughts or ideas..Fragment do not express complete ideas..
Often, you can combine thoughts from 2 fragments to make a complete, meaningful sentence.
Yes, you can. Here is an example sentence: Example: His thoughts were immanent
This sentence is an example of a metaphor, where the faces of the men are compared to mirrors reflecting "large thoughts."
With patriotic thoughts we entered the town.
Leonardo de Vinci transcribed his thoughts into notebooks.