Check chapter 7, page 86. It is the last page of the chapter 7.
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.
A human's skin is normally soft, warm, and smooth. A rooster or chicken's skin will feel bumpy, and coarse.
The possessive form for the noun rooster is rooster's.
When they get the injections from a rooster's comb, the rooster does have to be killed. They can get rid of a rooster's comb without killing it but it has to be on the first day that it is born.
Your rooster may have been in a fight and had his feathers pecked out, or he has pulled them out himself.
rooster
The plural of rooster is roosters.
A rooster crows.
Rooster
the sun comes up when a rooster crows because whenever a rooster see's a peek of light the rooster crows
The word Rooster in Spanish is GALLO when speaking of a young rooster or cockerel it is called Gallito
No, rooster fries are not actually rooster testes. The term "rooster fries" is a euphemism for deep-fried chicken gizzards, which are part of the digestive system of the chicken, not the reproductive organs.