me in tow behind

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Maybo

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He shuffled down the hall, me in tow behind, looking at his bony legs and taking small steps so as not to bump up on him. (Have a Little Faith by Mitch Albom)

Is "with" or "and" omitted before "me"?
 

GoesStation

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Nothing is omitted, but "with" could be added with no change in meaning. "And" wouldn't work. Can you see why not?
 

GoesStation

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Is it because "me in tow behind" is not a sentence?

No. There's nothing for "and" to relate to. This sentence works: He shuffled down the hall, Kate's hand in his and me in tow behind. It has two ideas joined by and.
 

Maybo

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Can I remove the first comma in the sentence? If I remove it, do I need to add "with"?
 

jutfrank

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You can, yes, but you'd obviously lose the effect that the comma has.

Yes, you do need to add with if you remove the comma.
 

Maybo

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Why isn't it "I in tow behind"?
 

GoesStation

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He shuffled down the hall, me in tow behind, looking at his bony legs and taking small steps so as not to bump up on him. (Have a Little Faith by Mitch Albom)

Is "with" or "and" omitted before "me"?

Why isn't it "I in tow behind"?
You answered the question in post #1: "with" is omitted. "Me" is, if I'm expressing this correctly, the object of the implied preposition.
 
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