The second sentence begins with an absolute phrase. My Little, Brown Handbook says that these are “always set off from the rest of the sentence with punctuation, usually a comma”. In this instance the comma would come between “case” and “everything”.
Huh? I think your grammar broke. Or you’re trying for some kind of very far fetched pun. Either way, please clarify.
The second sentence begins with an absolute phrase. My Little, Brown Handbook says that these are “always set off from the rest of the sentence with punctuation, usually a comma”. In this instance the comma would come between “case” and “everything”.
Not especially. I simplified things somewhat but I don’t think it was necessary.
I’m confused. What isn’t clear? The physics reference?
huh? No. The confusing parts are “building material” and “represents” I think.