parallel
Americanadjective
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extending in the same direction, equidistant at all points, and never converging or diverging.
Parallel rows of trees lined two ends of the parking lot.
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having the same direction, course, nature, or tendency; corresponding; similar; analogous.
Canada and the United States have many parallel economic interests.
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Geometry.
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(of straight lines) lying in the same plane but never meeting no matter how far extended.
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(of planes) having common perpendiculars.
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(of a single line, plane, etc.) equidistant from another or others (usually followed by to orwith ).
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Electricity. consisting of or having component parts connected in such a way that all positive terminals are connected to one point and all negative terminals are connected to a second point, the same voltage being applied to each component.
a parallel circuit.
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Music.
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(of two voice parts) progressing so that the interval between them remains the same.
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(of a tonality or key) having the same tonic but differing in mode.
A major and A minor are parallel keys.
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Computers.
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of or relating to the apparent or actual performance of more than one operation at a time by the same or different devices (serial ).
Some computer systems join more than one CPU for parallel processing.
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of or relating to the simultaneous transmission or processing of all the parts of a whole, as all the bits of a byte or all the bytes of a computer word (serial ).
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Grammar. consisting of matched syntactic elements in corresponding positions.
In the sentence “I have three cats and two dogs,” “three cats” and “two dogs” are in parallel structure.
noun
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a parallel line or plane.
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anything parallel or comparable to something else in direction, course, nature, or tendency.
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Also called parallel of latitude. Geography.
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an imaginary circle on the earth's surface formed by the intersection of a plane parallel to the plane of the equator, bearing east and west and designated in degrees of latitude north or south of the equator along the arc of any meridian.
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the line representing this circle on a chart or map.
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something identical or similar in essential respects; match; counterpart.
It's a struggle to diagnose a case history without a known parallel.
- Synonyms:
- equivalent, body double, twin, duplicate, mate, equal
- Antonyms:
- opposite
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correspondence or analogy.
These two cases have some parallel with each other.
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a comparison of things as if regarded side by side.
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Electricity. an arrangement of the components, such as resistors, of a circuit in such a way that all positive terminals are connected to one point and all negative terminals are connected to a second point, the same voltage being applied to each component.
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Fortification. a trench cut in the ground before a fortress, parallel to its defenses, for the purpose of covering a besieging force.
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Printing. a pair of vertical parallel lines (‖) used as a mark for reference.
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Theater. a trestle for supporting a platform parallel top.
verb (used with object)
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to provide or show a parallel for; match.
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to go or be in a parallel course, direction, etc., to.
The road parallels the river.
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to form a parallel to; be equivalent to; equal.
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to show the identity or similarity of; compare.
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to make parallel.
idioms
adjective
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separated by an equal distance at every point; never touching or intersecting
parallel walls
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corresponding; similar
parallel situations
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music
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Also: consecutive. (of two or more parts or melodies) moving in similar motion but keeping the same interval apart throughout
parallel fifths
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denoting successive chords in which the individual notes move in parallel motion
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grammar denoting syntactic constructions in which the constituents of one construction correspond to those of the other
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computing operating on several items of information, instructions, etc, simultaneously Compare serial
noun
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maths one of a set of parallel lines, planes, etc
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an exact likeness
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a comparison
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Also called: parallel of latitude. any of the imaginary lines around the earth parallel to the equator, designated by degrees of latitude ranging from 0° at the equator to 90° at the poles
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a configuration of two or more electrical components connected between two points in a circuit so that the same voltage is applied to each (esp in the phrase in parallel )
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( as modifier ) See series
a parallel circuit
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printing the character (∥) used as a reference mark
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a trench or line lying in advance of and parallel to other defensive positions
verb
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to make parallel
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to supply a parallel to
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to be a parallel to or correspond with
your experience parallels mine
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Any of the imaginary lines encircling the Earth's surface parallel to the plane of the equator, used to represent degrees of latitude.
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See illustration at longitude
Other Word Forms
- nonparallel adjective
- parallelable adjective
- parallelless adjective
- parallelly adverb
- subparallel adjective
- unparallel adjective
Etymology
Origin of parallel
First recorded in 1540–50; from Latin parallēlus, from Greek parállēlos “side by side,” from par- par- + állēlos “one another” ( allo- )
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
I’m sure the economics nerds will say that doesn’t count, but I think it’s a parallel worth considering.
From Salon • Apr. 4, 2026
The case has unfolded alongside a parallel legal offensive from Baldoni, who filed a sweeping $400-million countersuit accusing Lively, her husband Ryan Reynolds, the New York Times and others of defamation and extortion.
From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 2, 2026
The other parallel is that private-credit investments now, and myriad mortgage instruments then, both promised high returns with minimal risk.
From Barron's • Mar. 27, 2026
However, Russ Mould investment director at AJ Bell said comments out of Washington and Tehran seemed to come from "parallel worlds".
From BBC • Mar. 27, 2026
We were just coming parallel to Fivemile Creek when he reached across the gearshift and rested his hand on mine.
From "Educated" by Tara Westover
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.