Juliet stabs herself in the heart with Romeo's dagger.
In Act IV, scene I of Romeo and Juliet, Juliet threatens to stab herself if Friar Lawrence does not help her.
A dagger. If the friar's potion doesn't work, she will stab herself.
Juliet stabbed her self because see took a potion that would make her sleep and when her lover (romeo) found her he thought see was dead so he stabbed himself so that he could be with her in death. but Juliet was still alive and when she woke up and sore that romeo was dead she stabbed herself.
A sword.
The potion which Juliet was to take was not poison. They were knockout drops, designed to make her look dead long enough to get buried then wake up and be reunited with Romeo. If they didn't work, she was prepared to stab herself to death, as she ultimately did.
a stab wound to the heart can result in cardiac tamponade
yes and no it depends on what you are stabbing them with and where your stabbing them. for example when you stab them in the stomach, heart, head or other places that have major organs the person is likely to die. but if it's in the leg or other unmajor places the person is likely to live.
No. Demi used to selfharm herself by cutting herself but NEVER stabbed herself.
stab their heart out
Romeo poisons himself
No janine stabbed herself
Juliet said, "O happy dagger, This is thy sheath: there rust and let me die."