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Park sang joon Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

A usage of a comma

A sorcerer, the protagonist got into his best friend Luke's dream about "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland."
He stepped down into the white rabbit hole, carrying the fainted Luke, to evade a invincible Fire Angel, it chased after
them, and a Jabberwock went after it.
They all fell through the tunnel and the two beasts landed through the opening following the protagonist and Luke.

I paused at the opening where I beheld an enormous flower garden in full bloom. All of the flowers were at least as tall as myself, and a shifting breeze bore me an overpowering redolence.
...........
Here the aroma were even stronger, the flowers, mostly in bloom, a fantastic canopy of colors as I rushed among them.
["Blood of Amber" of The Great Book of Amber by Roger Zelazny]
I'd like to know if the comma before "mostly in bloom" plays the role of "being."
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

The comma is the first of a pair surrounding parenthetical "mostly in bloom". Even if you inserted "being", you still would be advised to use a comma.

  • The comma is the first of a pair surrounding parenthetical "mostly in bloom".
  • Even if you inserted "being", you still would be advised to use a comma.
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3 Answers
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The comma is the first of a pair surrounding parenthetical "mostly in bloom". Even if you inserted "being", you still would be advised to use a comma.
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Thank you, GPY, for another so very kind answer from you. Emotion: smile
Then I was wondering what role "the flowers" and "a fantastic canopy
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It is shorthand for this:

Here the aromas were even stronger, and the flowers, which were mostly in bloom, were a fantastic canopy of colors as I rushed among them.

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