How to Use part and parcel in a Sentence

part and parcel

noun
  • That is part and parcel of what this business is.
    Anne Thompson, IndieWire, 17 Dec. 2025
  • And the creative process was part and parcel to that.
    Josh Crutchmer, Rolling Stone, 7 Oct. 2025
  • In many ways, that goes part and parcel with the trade deadline.
    Chris Johnston, New York Times, 4 Feb. 2026
  • For Sam, that is part and parcel of what that entire world is like.
    Lexi Carson, HollywoodReporter, 2 June 2025
  • That, like it or not, is part and parcel of the Senate's job.
    Michael Ryan, Star Tribune, 22 Sep. 2020
  • In some ways, this consume-and-discard approach is part and parcel of my job.
    Daisy Jones, Vogue, 5 Feb. 2025
  • Criticism will be part and parcel of anything new, of course.
    David Folkenflik, NPR, 30 Jan. 2026
  • This book is all part and parcel of our mission, which is to inspire girls and young women.
    Gabriela Saldivia, Scientific American, 3 Dec. 2025
  • The fight against dementia, then, is part and parcel with the fight against climate change.
    Joel Mathis, theweek, 14 Aug. 2024
  • Few gardening tools are more part and parcel to yard work than the wheelbarrow.
    Tony Carrick, Popular Mechanics, 6 Apr. 2023
  • The quest to find a mean sea level for the whole world was part and parcel of the quest to make the world governable.
    Brooke Jarvis, The New Yorker, 19 Aug. 2024
  • Building that rapport and trust with clients is part and parcel with their clinical work.
    Scottie Andrew, CNN, 5 July 2020
  • The changes in the world are part and parcel of a story that’s deeply rooted in its characters.
    Liz Shannon Miller, The Verge, 24 June 2019
  • The reaction to Marsh’s video is part and parcel with a larger trend on the right.
    Ej Dickson, Rolling Stone, 21 Apr. 2022
  • Movement is part and parcel of the labor market, and there’s no fighting the tide.
    Kweilin Ellingrud, Forbes, 8 Aug. 2022
  • There’s always internet noise, which is fine and part and parcel of making a movie.
    Alex Ritman, Variety, 17 Apr. 2026
  • The trip from his bus stop to his house was largely uneventful, part and parcel of his childhood.
    Kalley Huang, Dallas News, 11 Aug. 2021
  • That has been part and parcel of the problem of the original 87.
    Los Angeles Times, 13 Sep. 2022
  • Khan- Terror attacks are ‘part and parcel of living in a big city’.
    Robert Peck, Wired, 3 Aug. 2020
  • The truth is that everyone has blind spots as part and parcel of the human condition.
    John Rex, Forbes, 20 Apr. 2021
  • All were part and parcel of the hedonistic brotherhood of chefs that drew him in.
    Sophie Gilbert, The Atlantic, 24 July 2021
  • Macdonald saw things that were part and parcel of his subject’s persona that others could not.
    John Roy, Vulture, 15 Sep. 2021
  • And for the most part, those attributes are part and parcel of the decision to charge the battery so quickly.
    Bengt Halvorson, Car and Driver, 16 Feb. 2018
  • This is already part and parcel of major LLMs.
    Lance Eliot, Forbes.com, 29 Jan. 2026
  • That’s not particularly part and parcel of their jobs.
    Lance Eliot, Forbes.com, 19 Sep. 2025
  • Some didn’t take addicts or self-harmers, as if those things didn’t exist part and parcel with mental illness.
    Marissa R. Moss, Rolling Stone, 6 Nov. 2025
  • Try to ignore the occasionally gusty wind, which is part and parcel with the change in season.
    Washington Post, 17 Oct. 2021
  • The show’s creaky dialogue comes part and parcel with a lot of its other more generic impulses.
    Jackson McHenry, Vulture, 11 June 2021
  • And, especially in this era, mistakes are part and parcel of the game for a defender.
    SI.com, 4 Oct. 2019
  • Its patronage for the axis of resistance is part and parcel of that campaign.
    Hamidreza Azizi, Foreign Affairs, 14 Feb. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'part and parcel.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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