Your vs. you’re
You’re is a contraction, a shorter way to say “you are.” Example: You’re looking great today. Your is a pronoun to show possession. Example: I picked up your notebook by accident; it looks like mine.
You’re is a contraction, a shorter way to say “you are.” Example: You’re looking great today. Your is a pronoun to show possession. Example: I picked up your notebook by accident; it looks like mine.
Never add an apostrophe S to make something plural.
Parallel sentences basically mean balanced sentences. A pattern of words is used to show that multiple ideas have the same priority level.
The word “who” can only be used when it is the subject of a verb. That might sound confusing, but it just means it is like the words “I,” “he,” “she,” “we,” and “they.”