Nope. The Nurse interrupts them. Rosaline does not have a line in the play. I'm not saying that someone else's Romeo and Juliet might not have Rosaline butt into their conversation, but this doesn't happen in Shakespeare's play.
no
juliet
the best scenes are the balcony scene and the last scene (when Romeo and Juliet die)
The balcony, which Juliet is on and Romeo is underneath is a symbol of their physical separation. Although they speak love to one another they cannot touch each other. It is therefore an emblem of chastity. Only after they marry does Romeo climb the balcony which emblematically means he is breaching Juliet's chastity
Balcony scene
He compares Juliet; the sun to Roseline who is the moon.
Act II
The sun!
In Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," Juliet's nurse interrupts Romeo while he is speaking to Juliet on the balcony. The nurse plays a key role in the relationship between Romeo and Juliet, often acting as a messenger between the two lovers.
Juliet sends her Nurse to find out if she is to be married to Romeo.
Juliet does not wait for Romeo on her balcony. Romeo is a kind of "peeping Tom" and overhears her talking to herself. She gets quite upset when she finds out that he's there.
Romeo compares Juliet to an angel who stands over the clouds.
Juliet in the balcony scene
The sun
no
He hides from her on the balcony because he wants to hear what she's saying. the "Romeo Romeo wherefore art thou Romeo speech"
juliet