yes
the nurse was the only one that helped Juliet send the message and was fine about romeo marrying Juliet and she is not crazy as the rest of there Juliets family
Yes, the Nurse understands Juliet's grief over Romeo's banishment and her determination not to marry Paris. The Nurse has a close relationship with Juliet and sympathizes with her feelings, wanting her to be happy. She ultimately supports Juliet's decision to pursue her love for Romeo despite the obstacles.
To kill herself
Oh Baby - 1998 Romeos and Juliets 1-19 was released on: USA: 13 February 1999
Juliets parents because they wont let them get married.
The Nurse interupts their conversation (pretty much every conversation they have when you think about it)
she kills herself because of her grief of Romeo's banishment
He is amazed by how lifelike she looks, almost as if she were alive. (And of course she is but he doesn't know it)
Romeo views banishment from Verona as a fate worse than death because it means being separated from Juliet, the love of his life. He expresses despair and sees it as a punishment that is unbearable, as it prevents him from being with Juliet.
Romeo reacted with despair and heartbreak upon hearing the prince's decree of banishment. He felt as though being separated from Juliet was a fate worse than death, and he was devastated at the thought of leaving Verona and his beloved.
Decide that they are going to make statues of Romeo and Juliet out of very expensive materials and agree to stop fighting.
He is really mad and disappointed. He'd rather be dead that to be banished.
she falls in love but is catious to weither she will be used for pleasaure and then just be thrown away. she wants to make sure romeos love is true.
The only thing that happens to Romeo's mother in the entire play is that she dies of grief at Romeo's banishment, and yes, it happened the same night Romeo died.