The irony in To Kill a Mocking Bird is verbal, dramatic, and situational irony.
The answer is Notary, so you do have the answer correct.
Answer:
"That man over there... aind ain't I a woman" - Rhetorical Question
This is beacause of the question posed by the speaker "ain't I a woman." This is more of a statement of fact than an interrogative statement. As such the speaker isn't looking for an answer, but is instead making a point.
"For who is there... torn from his limbs" - Rhetorical Question for the same reason as above.
<span>There are a lot of different similes that could be used to describe a haunted house. For example, the haunted house was dark as midnight, as cold as an arctic winter, as quiet as a desert. Similes are words used to describe something being like something else, rather than there being a straight comparison. </span>