I'm in the middle of beta-reading someone's work and I've come across this:
"He won't let it show but I know that you leaving is eating him alive."
My question concerns the you leaving part. I know the current construction is very common in dialogue but I'm not sure as to how grammatically correct it is by more formal standards (and the speaker
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"your leaving" is also valid, because what's eating him is the leaving. It happens to be your leaving, but it could be anybody's leaving.
"not having you around" is eating him alive.
"you being absent" is eating him alive.
"your absence" is eating him alive.
All valid, I say.
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A comma should also come before "but," right?
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* The teacher's shouting startled the student. (Shouting is a gerund, and teacher's is a possessive pronoun. The shouting is the subject of the sentence.)
* The teacher shouting startled the student. (Shouting is a participle describing the teacher. This sentence means The teacher who was shouting startled the student. In this sentence, the subject is the teacher herself.)
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