There are many literary elememts used in this novel. In the first chapters, we see the main ones being allusions (like when Scout talks about The Battle of Hastings and Andrew Jackson) and imagery (used when describing the characters and the town itself)
hmm
he talks to scout about having babies
Some examples of idioms in "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee include "bought the farm" meaning to die, "cry over spilt milk" meaning to regret something that has already happened, and "barking up the wrong tree" meaning to pursue the wrong course of action.
There are many examples of humor including funny humor such as a joke. There is also dark humor that hurts people.
Oh, dude, in chapters 2-3 of "To Kill a Mockingbird," there's some classic humor, like when Scout gets in trouble at school for being able to read and write already, like, what a crime, right? And then there's the whole thing with Miss Caroline Fisher not understanding the Cunninghams' ways - like, come on, lady, get with the program. Overall, Harper Lee throws in some witty moments to lighten the mood in between all the heavy stuff.
"To Kill a Mockingbird" was banned by some schools and libraries in the United States due to its use of racial slurs and themes of racism, which some people found offensive or inappropriate for young readers.
The Mockingbird is a metaphor (Boo Radley and Tom Robinson).
Boo Radley Game.
Atticus Finch (To Kill A Mockingbird)
To Kill A Mockingbird
"To Kill a Mockingbird" was banned in 2017 due to its use of racial slurs and themes of racism, which some schools and organizations found offensive and inappropriate for students.
Yes, it is possible to kill a mockingbird, but please don't. It's not very nice, and in some places it is even illegal, to kill any songbird.(Fun fact: mockingbird is one word, not two words.)