The occupation of the narrator in "Just Lather, That's All"
Barber
The most exciting part of a story.
Conversations or words that characters say.
Dialogue
Onomatopoeia
The accident in which Mr. Mallard has supposedly died in "The Story of an Hour."
Railroad accident
All six types of conflict.
Person vs. Person, Person vs. Self, Person vs. Society, Person vs. Nature, Person vs. Supernatural, Person vs. Technology
A traffic cop gets a ticket.
Situational Irony
She parked the tiny car and left it crouching behind the hill.
Personification
The name of the violent man who receives a shave in "Just Lather, That's All."
Captain Torres
The two types of third-person narration
Limited and omniscient
A hint or clue about what is to come later on in a story.
Foreshadowing
High school is a jungle.
Metaphor
The two characters that break the news to Mrs. Mallard in "The Story of an Hour."
Her sister Josephine and her husband's friend Richards
A character who does not grow or change in a story.
Static character
The detectives in "Lamb to the Slaughter" eat the murder weapon.
Dramatic Irony
Verbal Irony
The items that Mary Maloney buys when she goes to the grocery store in "Lamb to the Slaughter."
Potatoes, peas, and cheesecake
The event that sets the story in motion.
The author's attitude toward the subject.
Tone
It was a hideously beautiful painting.
Oxymoron