Chapter 1
-The narrator is Scout Finch.
-The setting is in Maycomb, Alabama.
-Atticus is the father and his wife died while Scout was two years old.
-Dill comes over the play during the summer with Scout and Jem.
-They are interested in Boo Radley and his house.
-The Radley house is mysterious because no one has ever entered it.
Chapter 2
-Scout hates her first year of school because her teacher wont let her read at home.
-Scout gets in trouble for standing up for Walter Cunningham.
-The teacher, Miss Caroline, tried to give Walter a quarter, but he didn't take it because he knew that he would have to repay her, but he can't.
Chapter 3
-Jem invites Walter to eat lunch at his house with Scout.
-Burris Ewell is in the same class as Scout and Walter but only comes to school the first day.
Chapter 4
-Scout and Jem find prizes in a knothole next to the Radley's, so they take them.
-The kids start playing a game where they impersonate Boo Radley, and this game ended due to Atticus finding out about it.
Chapter 5
-The kids try and slip a note through the Radley house window, but they get caught by Atticus.
Chapter 6
-It is Dill's last day in Maycomb, so the kids try and enter the Radley's backyard.
-They enter it and go on the back porch until they hear a shotgun.
-The kids start to run, but Jem's pants get caught on the fence, so he takes them off to run.
-When Jem comes back to pick them up, they are folded nicely on the fence.
Chapter 7
-The prizes keep appearing everyday, so they get curious until the knothole gets cemented by Nathan Radley.
Chapter 8
-It is snowing in Maycomb, so the kids make a snowman that looks like Mr. Avery.
-Ms. Maudie's house catches on fire, so the whole town stops the fire.
-The kids were watching the house burn near the Radley house.
-Scout discovers that someone put a blanket over her shoulders, and she thinks that it was Boo.
Chapter 9
-Atticus is chosen to defend Tom Robinson, and he accepts.
-Everybody at school calls him a n****-lover, but Scout made a promise that she won't punch anyone.
-Uncle Jack, Aunt Alexandra, and Francis come over for dinner.
-Francis calls Atticus a n****-lover, and Scout punches him.
Chapter 10
-Atticus gets Jem and Scout air rifles for Christmas, and he tells them that it is a sin to kill mockingbirds.
-There is a rabid dog on the Finch's street, so Atticus shoots it.
Hope this helps
Romeo calls it a cordial because, the poison will "help heal his heart".
Also cordial means <span>a comforting or pleasant-tasting medicine. So in a sense it is helping him heal, so he can be with Juliet.</span>
Chaucer's original plan for The Canterbury Tales projected about 120 stories (two for each pilgrim to tell on the way to Canterbury and two more on the way back)
Chaucer actually completed only 22, although 2 more exist in fragments.


Irony can be tough to write because first you have to notice something ironic to write about a situation, which is a kind of insight. That’s also why it’s a fairly impressive writing technique. So the trick is not to practice writing irony but to practice noticing it. Look around you every day, and you will see plenty of ways in which ordinary expectations are contradicted by what happens in the real, unpredictable world.As you look around for irony, take care to avoid the pitfall of confusing irony with coincidence. Often coincidences are ironic, and often they are not. Think of it this way: a coincidence would be if firemen, on the way home from putting out a fire, suddenly got called back out to fight another one. Irony would be if their fire truck caught on fire. The latter violates our expectations about fire trucks, whereas the former is just an unfortunate (but not necessarily unexpected) turn of events.
Another way of putting it is this: coincidence is a relationship between facts (e.g. Fire 1 and Fire 2), whereas irony is a relationship between a fact and an expectation and how they contradict each other.
When to use irony
Irony belongs more in creative writing than in formal essays. It’s a great way of getting a reader engaged in a story, since it sets up expectations and then provokes an emotional response. It also makes a story feel more lifelike, since having our expectations violated is a universal experience. And, of course, humor is always valuable in creative writing.
Verbal irony is also useful in creative writing,
<h2>ʜᴏᴘᴇ ɪᴛ ʜᴇʟᴘs ʏᴏᴜ - </h2>
Humans are random, they may save some but not all.
Here re 5 animals who they would save.
CATS
DOGS
HORSE
BIRDS
FISH/