grammaticality - Why is the word "is" skipped?


I was watching something and someone said this



Interior, Outer Space. A distopian future. The year is 1000. An astronaut floats in. His eyes are average, his face fine.



"His face fine" sounds like it is skipping the word "is", like something a caveman would say. Is this good English or was this a mistake?



Answer



"His face is fine" <- that "is" is implied in the previous are.


Consider the following:



His eyes are blue, his hair white and his coat long.



When being poetic, you don't need the remaining is/are, no matter how many are followed by the first one, which already implies itself to the rest of the sentence.


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