<span>B. Metaphor
A metaphor is a comparison of two things without using like or as. In these lines, Helena is being compared to a spaniel. She is saying that no matter how poorly she is treated by Demetrius, she is devoted to him.
Imagery is a vivid description that appeals to the senses. Onomatopoeia is a word that sounds like its meaning. Boom, crack, hush all are onomatopoeias.
Personification is giving non-human things human-like traits. The tree branches waved in the wind is one example. </span>
An infinitive is the verb form using the word "to," as in "to eat," "to play," or "to read." An infinitive phrase includes the base infinitive plus other modifiers or complements. An infinitive phrase can often be used as the subject of a sentence because it refers to the act itself rather than doing the action. In this case, "to make it to the end of the day" is an infinitive phrase acting as the subject of the sentence.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
A fused sentence is a run-on sentence in which two independent clauses run together with no proper punctuation mark like a period or semi-colon, or conjunction like <em>and </em>or <em>but </em>between them. In sentence number B, there is no punctuation mark or conjunction; hence, it is a fused sentence.