Answer:
Perhaps a great aunt died and she left the person money. The person wasn't expecting to get an inheritance, so it was unexpected.
Explanation:
Faulty parallelism is a construction in which two or more parts of a sentence are roughly equivalent in meaning but not parallel (or grammatically similar) in form. Faulty parallelism most often occurs with paired constructions and items in a series.
He sees sharks swimming very close to the shoreline, he knows there are moray eels living in the crevices, and the birds have their nesting grounds on the beach nearby.
German submarines may detect they are on the island has nothing to do with swimming or water.
<span> Curie, a two-time Nobel Prize recipient and physics professor at the Sorbonne (a college of the University of Paris), presented this speech at Vassar College in Housekeeping, New York, on May 14, 1921. The speech, preserved in print as no. 2 of Vassar's Ellen S. Richards Monographs series, centers on what Curie called "the somewhat peculiar conditions of the discovery of radium" and her view that "the scientific history of radium is beautiful." The speech is provided online at the Gifts of Speech Web site, by Liz Linton, site director; and electronic resources and serials librarian in Cochran Library, Sweet Briar College, Virginia.</span>