i dont know what this is asking but if you elaborated i could try to help you
to enrich
An infinitive is the basic form of the verb without a subject. When it is used in a sentence, it is preceded by "to". The correct answer is the one with a verb. To test it out just ask yourself if you can use it with the subject I after dropping "to". I enrich? Yes! Check, it's right. You can't say I the delight or I Tuesday mornings. The rest of the options are prepositional phrases because they start with the preposition to and end in a noun (person, place, thing, or idea).
The anwer is <span>Few airmen volunteered for positions as gunners.
</span><span>in The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner depicted the situation in World War II. You can see it from these lines:
</span><span><em>Six miles from earth, loosed from its dream of life, - </em>indicates that he's lonely
</span><span><em>I woke to black flak and the nightmare fighters. - </em>indicates that he held the position as gunners.</span>
I think the answer is a fog
1. c. the message the author is communicating
2. c. sometimes the author and sometimes an invented character
3. a. direct object
4. a. direct object
5. b. indirect object