Table of Contents
- 1 Who says thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more wit wilt thou not Jule?
- 2 What is the line about Mad Men Romeo and Juliet?
- 3 What does Romeo say when Juliet asks him if he thinks they will ever see each other again?
- 4 Who says tell me daughter Juliet how stands your disposition to be married?
- 5 What are Romeo and Juliet arguing about in Scene 5?
- 6 What is Romeo jealous of?
- 7 Why is the nurse to blame for Romeo and Juliet’s death?
- 8 How does Juliet trick her mother into thinking she hates Romeo?
Who says thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more wit wilt thou not Jule?
dost thou fall upon thy face? / Thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more wit, / Wilt thou not, Jule?” Juliet, not understanding the sexual innuendo, had said, “Ay” (I. iii. 41-44; cf. 55-57).
What is the line about Mad Men Romeo and Juliet?
Unless philosophy can create a Juliet, or pick up a town and put it somewhere else, or reverse a prince’s punishment, it doesn’t do me any good. Don’t say anything else. Oh, then I see that madmen have no ears. Oh, so madmen like you are also deaf.
What is the funniest thing the nurse says in Romeo and Juliet?
Here, she’s literally talking about getting a ladder for Romeo to climb up so he can spend the night in Juliet’s bedroom. But there’s never just one level with the Nurse—To “climb a bird’s nest” is also slang for having sex. It’s a laugh a minute.
What does Romeo say when Juliet asks him if he thinks they will ever see each other again?
She asks, “O think’st thou we shall ever meet again?” (3.5. 51). Romeo reassuringly answers, “I doubt it not; and all these woes shall serve / For sweet discourses in our time to come” (3.5. 52-53).
Who says tell me daughter Juliet how stands your disposition to be married?
59-62). The Nurse’s mention of marriage gives Juliet’s mother the opportunity to say what is on her mind. She says, “Tell me, daughter Juliet, / How stands your disposition to be married?” (1.3. 64-65).
How stands your disposition to be married?
How stands your disposition to be married? Well, marriage is exactly what we have to discuss. Tell me, my daughter Juliet, what is your attitude about getting married? It is an honor that I dream not of.
What are Romeo and Juliet arguing about in Scene 5?
Juliet tries to convince Romeo that the birdcalls they hear are from the nightingale, a night bird, rather than from the lark, a morning bird. Romeo cannot entertain her claims; he must leave before the morning comes or be put to death.
What is Romeo jealous of?
Romeo recognizes that the slain body is Paris who was scheduled to marry Juliet. He is jealous that Paris gets to be dead with Juliet, but he places the corpse in the tomb and sees Juliet.
Why is he a man of wax?
The nurse describes Paris as “a man of wax” meaning that he’s as handsome as a statue, and then she enthusiastically agrees with Lady Capulet’s description of him as a “flower.” But to wax means to swell (as in a waxing moon) and to flower means to sprout.
Why is the nurse to blame for Romeo and Juliet’s death?
In Romeo and Juliet, to what extent is the Nurse to blame for the tragedy? In Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, the Nurse, by her thoughtless support of the affair between the lovers and fickle counsel, is partly to blame for the tragedy.
How does Juliet trick her mother into thinking she hates Romeo?
Lord Capulet decides that Juliet will marry Count Paris. How does Juliet trick her mother into thinking she hates Romeo beginning with line 94? Juliet makes her mother believe that she wants to avenge Tybalt’s death by murdering Romeo.
Why does Lady Capulet think that Juliet has been weeping?
Lady Capulet thinks Juliet is crying because of Tybalt’s death. He was her cousin. Juliet is actually crying because it was Romeo who killed Tybalt, and as a result, he has been banished from Verona. As a result of thinking Juliet is crying over Tybalt, her mother tells her she’s going to send someone to kill Romeo.