parallel (exact matches only)
I would ask you to cast your mind back to the dark days of World War II. The parallels with today are striking.
What we do know is that the Commission on Judicial Performance has done a parallel investigation of Danser.
In parallel online surveys, 76% of advertising and marketing professionals agreed that "advertising is still an industry for innovators."
These radio tales were fondly and wittily rendered, nostalgic without degenerating into mawkishness, and had some interesting parallels with the wider and supposedly more mature world.
The water "overflowed and saturated the country when in the full flush of a most luxuriant vegetation, and the hot sun of July and the decaying matters ushered in a season of unparalleled sickness and deadly fevers."
Rain made another parallel with the historic match of 10 years ago, when it set in at lunchtime.
``The main point I try to make is it's important to connect with animals; it's parallel to connecting with the divine.
Amorous misadventures starting in the month before Christmas, cannily released in the month before Christmas, fortuitously touching on an American president's visit to Britain - but there real-life parallels end; for our boyishly idealistic PM makes a speech mentioning Churchill and Shakespeare and refuses to be bullied.
"Yes I do [see a parallel with Iraq]. This president breached faith with the lesson...we learned in Vietnam.
For instance, it was at a G-20 Finance Ministers Meeting that the Washington Consensus on financial liberalization was modified to include the need for stronger social programmes on a parallel basis.
At the time, Kasparov muttered parallels to Diego Maradona's "hand of God", but the insinuation – too willingly bought here – that IBM cheated with a combination of brute processing power, unfair knowledge of its opponent and tactical human intervention remains mere whispering in the dark.
She composed analogical chains that collapsed on inspection (''Diligence Is to Magic as Progress Is to Flight''). She relished what might be called false parallelisms, as in ''the enslaver is / enslaved; the hater, harmed'' (one expects the hater to be hated, yet how much more telling is that softer substitute) and in her habit of conjoining unlike things (''oratories and wardrobes''). It may be that no critic of Moore should be trusted who doesn't sometimes find her off-putting.
He and his alter ego, Tony Blair, scarcely impact on the world at all: they are ghostly presences who live in a parallel universe of illusion, of what seems to be rather than of what is.
"I can definitely draw parallels in my life and Anna's life, certainly not to those extremes," Moore said.
More examples in news.google.com [parallel]