The conflict in the short story "Aunt Suzie's Rooster" is between Aunt Suzie, who loves her rooster and wants to keep him, and the narrator's father, who sees the rooster as a nuisance and wants to get rid of him. The conflict is mainly due to the rooster's loud and disruptive crowing, which disturbs the narrator's father's sleep and annoys him. Aunt Suzie tries to persuade her brother (the narrator's father) to let her keep the rooster because it reminds her of her deceased husband, but the father insists that the rooster must go. The conflict is resolved when the narrator's father and brother secretly take the rooster away and give it to a neighbor who wants it. Aunt Suzie is upset at first but eventually comes to accept the loss of her beloved rooster.
Oh, dude, you're talking about a short person and a rooster's appendage? Well, technically, a rooster's appendage is called a comb, and a short person could refer to someone vertically challenged. So, if you put them together, you might get a short person admiring a rooster's stylish comb... or something like that.
The build up of conflict in a short story is called the rising action. This is where the tension and complications in the plot increase, leading to the climax of the story.
The main character having the conflict is called the protagonist.
The part of a short story that explains the motives, conflict, and characters before the action starts to rise is called the rising action.
Young male chickens are called cockerels, which is sometimes shortened to just 'cock'. All male chickens in North America are more commonly called roosters.
in short it means your clan were great warriors
what is the conflict of the short story Dada by Morli Dharam
The Conversion of the Jews Included as one of the short stories in his first book, Goodbye Columbus.
Oh, dude, in "My Brother's Peculiar Chicken," the conflict is basically a family disagreement over whether the chicken is normal or not. The brother thinks the chicken is special, but the narrator and their father are skeptical. It's like a whole drama over a funky chicken, man.
The ending of a short story is called the resolution or denouement (which is unfortunately pronounced 'day-new-moe'not 'duh-now-ment'). It's a French word.
Banty is short for Bantam. The old folks back in the day just always call Bantam Roosters, "banty" roosters. In addition this term is used to describe the behavior of some short men who may tend to walk with a swagger and adopt a somewhat exaggerated male posture. They are called banty roosters after the bantam rooster both because of their size and because their behavior can "out-rooster" the more standard sized rooster. Bantams are about 1/4 the size of what is considered a "regular" chicken. They are sometimes referred to as domestic game birds. Most people raise them as pets, unfortunately there are those who still raise and use them to fight. A Banty rooster will try with all his might to mate a standard hen. Whether he can actually make the connection to fertilize eggs is a whole nother question.
The beginning of a story is called the exposition - it's when you are introduced to the characters and the setting and the conflict of the story.