How is the comma used as an interrupter in this sentence?

Walking the tight rope, an amazing feat, is a dangerous career.
parenthetical expression
two adjectives before a noun
appositive
summary
direct address

1 answer

In the sentence "Walking the tight rope, an amazing feat, is a dangerous career," the comma is used to set off a parenthetical expression.

A parenthetical expression is additional information that can be removed without changing the fundamental meaning of the sentence. In this case, "an amazing feat" provides extra detail about "walking the tight rope" but is not essential to the sentence's main idea. The use of commas indicates that this information is supplementary.