ACT English Parallel Structure: Balance Your Sentences for Correctness

Published on March 12, 2026
ACT English Parallel Structure: Balance Your Sentences for Correctness

What Parallel Structure Is and Why It Matters

Parallel structure means that similar elements in a sentence must have the same grammatical form. Example of broken parallelism: "She likes reading, swimming, and to bike." The first two items are gerunds (reading, swimming), but the third is an infinitive (to bike). Fix: "She likes reading, swimming, and biking." All three are now gerunds, making the sentence balanced. When elements share the same grammatical form, they're parallel and the sentence flows naturally. When they don't match, the sentence sounds awkward and is grammatically incorrect.

Another example: "He was not only talented but also he was dedicated." The construction "not only...but also" requires parallel structure. Fix: "He was not only talented but also dedicated." Both phrases now follow "was," making them parallel adjectives.

Study for free with 10 full-length ACT practice tests

Same format as the official Enhanced ACT, with realistic difficulty.

Start free practice test
No credit card required • Free score report

Three Common Parallel Structure Mistakes on ACT

Mistake 1: Mixing gerunds and infinitives in a list. "I want to run, jump, and swimming" should be "I want to run, jump, and swim" (all infinitives). Mistake 2: Breaking parallelism in "not only...but also" constructions. "She was not only smart but also she studied hard" should be "She was not only smart but also hardworking." Mistake 3: Mismatching items in comparisons. "Singing is as enjoyable as to dance" should be "Singing is as enjoyable as dancing." The rule is consistent: when items are listed together or compared, give them matching grammatical forms.

During practice, mark every list and comparison. Check that all items have the same form (all nouns, all verbs, all adjectives, all phrases). This habit prevents parallelism errors before you see answer choices.

Six Parallel Structure Sentences to Fix

Sentence 1: "The team is fast, strong, and with good coordination." Error: Mixed adjectives and prepositional phrase. Fix: "The team is fast, strong, and well-coordinated." Sentence 2: "She enjoys reading books and to watch movies." Error: Mixed gerunds and infinitives. Fix: "She enjoys reading books and watching movies." Sentence 3: "He was tall, intelligent, and had great humor." Error: Mixed adjectives and verb phrase. Fix: "He was tall, intelligent, and humorous." Sentence 4: "Not only did she win the race, but also the award." Error: Mismatched clauses. Fix: "Not only did she win the race, but she also won the award." Sentence 5: "Working out and to eat healthy are important." Error: Mixed gerund and infinitive. Fix: "Working out and eating healthy are important." Sentence 6: "She likes to run, swimming, and biking." Error: Mixed infinitive and gerunds. Fix: "She likes running, swimming, and biking."

Find five parallel structure questions from a practice test. Mark each list or comparison and verify all items match. By the fifth question, you'll spot parallelism errors automatically.

Study for free with 10 full-length ACT practice tests

Same format as the official Enhanced ACT, with realistic difficulty.

Start free practice test
No credit card required • Free score report

Parallel Structure and Your English Score

Parallel structure errors appear on most ACT English tests, usually in list or comparison questions. Because the rule is learnable and errors are consistent, this is a high-value skill. Mastering parallel structure picks up 1-2 points on the English section because the error is predictable and the fix is straightforward once you know what to look for.

Drill parallel structure this week. On every practice test, mark all lists and comparisons and verify they're parallel. By test day, you should spot parallelism errors faster than you spot comma splices.

Use AdmitStudio's free application support tools to help you stand out

Take full length practice tests and personalized appplication support to help you get accepted.

Sign up for free
No credit card required • Application support • Practice Tests

Related Articles

ACT Reading: Master the Main Idea vs. Detail Question Difference

These two question types are tested differently. Learn to spot them fast and answer them correctly.

ACT English: Fix Misplaced Modifiers in Seconds With This Rule

Modifier questions confuse students until you learn the one rule that fixes every error. Here it is.

ACT Reading: Master the Main Idea vs. Detail Question Difference

These two question types are tested differently. Learn to spot them fast and answer them correctly.

ACT English: Fix Misplaced Modifiers in Seconds With This Rule

Modifier questions confuse students until you learn the one rule that fixes every error. Here it is.