To biteyour thumb. Rather weird...
An insulting gesture in "Romeo and Juliet" is to bite one's thumb. This action is akin to flipping someone off in modern-day terms and is seen as a sign of disrespect.
What I like about Romeo and Juliet is the part where they bite their thumbs. That's what you get for asking me.
Romeo died first. Juliet took a fake potion to make her sleep but appear to be dead. Romeo then drank his potion presuming her dead and died. Juliet then woke up to find Romeo dead and stabbed herself with his knife.
It's the past tense of bite. You know like when a bratty little kid whines, "My sister bit me!" It has other meanings, but this is the one in Romeo and Juliet, in the line "As is the bud bit with an envious worm".
Biting your thumb at someone back then is the equivalent to giving someone the middle finger today. It's just a rude gesture intended to make the Capulets angry. When they are asked "Are you biting our thumb at us, Sir?" and respond saying "I do bite my thumb sir." That would be the same as when people subtly give you the middle finger and say that isn'thow they meant it.
The monkey would bite your hand before you got the first line out.
In medieval times this was the equivalent of giving someone the middle finger.
Well, the gesture was not exactly a "thumbs-up". He held his hand in that position, all right, but then he flicked his thumbnail against his teeth. ("Do you bite your thumb at me, sir?") The hand position was known as a "fico", which is Italian for fig, and both the hand position and figs have a shape which is lumpy at the bottom with a tall, erect, slightly curved part sticking out of the top, a shape which resembles another part of the male anatomy. The gesture means the same as "flipping the bird" and for the same reason: a fist with the middle finger extended resembles that same male body part.
Hurry up, _______ and set so that night will come and _____________ can leap into my ________ Lovers don't need _____________ to make love. If __________ is blind it best agrees with _____________. Come on, night, so I can learn to _________ the love game. I'll _________ to Romeo, and we'll both lose our ______________. Cover my blushing ____________ until I grow __________ enough to act out my true __________. Come night. Come _____________, and lie with me this night. Give me my ________ and when he ___________ cut him up into little ___________, and he will light the ________ so fine that all the _________ will be on love with ____________ and not ______. Oh, I have taken the _______________ vow, yet I am still a virgin. it's like a child who has new _______, but is not allowed to __________ them
"Bite your thumb" is an old gesture of insult or provocation, similar to giving someone the finger. It is considered rude in many cultures and can escalate tensions between individuals.
an example of comic relief is at the beginning of the play with the Montagues and the CapuletsI:i:41-53 "I will frown as I pass by... No, sir, I do not bite my thumb at you, sir; but I bite my thumb, sir."
In Act 1, Scene 1 of "Romeo and Juliet," the conflict that arises is between the servants of the Capulet and Montague households. They engage in a street brawl that sets the stage for the ongoing feud between the two families, which becomes a central conflict throughout the play.
Two servants of the Capulet household, Sampson and Gregory, see two servants from the Montague household, Abraham and Balthazar, on the streets of Verona. The Capulets bite their thumbs at the Montagues, which was the equivalent of giving the middle finger, and started a fight. Benvolio, Romeo's cousin and a Montague, sees it and tries to separate the servants, but Tybalt, Juliet's cousin and a Capulet, insists on fighting Benvolio. A large fight breaks out, the third between the two families, and Prince Escalus decrees that one more fight between the families in the streets will cause them to be put to death. Afterwards, Montague and Lady Montague worry about Romeo, who has been depressed and locking himself in his room. Benvolio talks to him and learns that Romeo is in love with Rosaline, but is upset because she does not know who she is, and because she has sworn to remain a virgin her whole life, and cannot be tempted by flirting. Benvolio tells Romeo to forget about her.