Here's the truth: your fear is nothing more than a bully that will melt away when properly confronted, leaving you free to enjoy the life and success you deserve...
I saw the above on Facebook.
What is the grammatical form and function of "leaving you free..."?
What does it modify and do we really need comma before it?
Here's the truth: your fear is nothing more than a bully that will melt away when properly confronted, leaving you free to enjoy the life and success you deserve ... The underlined element is a gerund-participial clause functioning as an adjunct, where i t has a resultative meaning. Note that we could insert "thus" at the beginning of the adjunct: ..
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Here's the truth: your fear is nothing more than a bully that will melt away when properly confronted, leaving you free to enjoy the life and success you deserve ...
The underlined element is a gerund-participial clause functioning as an adjunct, where i