With him being my good helper, I won’t be worried about the work.

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diamondcutter

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Oct 21, 2014
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English Teacher
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Chinese
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China
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China
I have a lot of work to do in my garden but my son says he will be free tomorrow and will give me a hand. With him being my good helper, I won’t be worried about the work.
(by me)

I’d like to know if my second sentence above is correct in this context.
 
No, it doesn't sound natural.

What's the point of this? Are you trying to practise using introductory participle phrases with with? Tell us exactly what you're trying to do.
 
Thanks, Jutfrank.

I want to use a simple sentence to express the meaning of the compound sentence: Since he is my good helper, I won’t be worried about the work.
What about this sentence? Is it correct?
He being my good helper, I won’t be worried about the work.
 
If I were you I wouldn't insist on using that phrase. Perhaps:

With him helping me I will be able to finish sooner.

I wouldn't use "With him being my good helper" at all.
 
If you want to expand on the original information, use something like "His help will be very welcome and will make the gardening a lot easier". (There are lots of other options but your original is completely unnatural.) "You're a good helper" sounds like the sort of thing someone might say to a very young child who has just assisted with something (probably something pretty simple).
 
I want to use a simple sentence to express the meaning of the compound sentence: Since he is my good helper, I won’t be worried about the work.
What about this sentence? Is it correct?
He being my good helper, I won’t be worried about the work.

Well, that's not a simple sentence, either. It seems very much like you're trying to make a participle phrase. Why?

I don't understand what a 'good helper' is. It sounds like a translation from Chinese.
 
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