She treats him guardedly in the only scene where they actually speak to each other. He is all full of self-importance, imagining that she's excited to marry him. She is being deliberately vague to put him off.
Juliet initially agrees to marry Paris due to family pressure, but she does not love him and ultimately tries to avoid the match by faking her own death. She treats Paris politely, but her true affections lie with Romeo.
Juliet only speaks to Paris in Act IV Scene 1. In this scene she speaks guardedly. She has agreed to marry him, and wants to keep up that pretence, but knows she cannot marry him, so wants to keep her distance. Much of what she says is ironic, with a double meaning known only to her and the friar, who is in on the secret.
Juliet "isn't into" Paris very much because she falls in love with Romeo before she meets Paris.
She is aloof but polite.
How does Juliet speak to Paris in scene i?
Paris has to get Juliet to like him.
Count Paris, he is a suitor to Juliet.
They plan for Juliet to marry Paris
Juliet's father, Lord Capulet, insists that Juliet marry Paris. He believes that Paris is a suitable match for his daughter and does not understand Juliet's hesitation.
NO! Paris is the male that Juliet's father, Sir Capulet, wanted Juliet to marry. Paris was very fond of Juliet; however, Juliet did not like Paris.
Paris, a man related to the Prince, has asked Capulet for permission to marry Juliet. As things play out, it appears that Paris does not think that actually talking to Juliet is a necessary part of this process.
The man that Juliet's parents engaged Juliet to, Count Paris. He is there to grieve Juliet but Romeo soon kills Paris and then poisons himself.
Paris believes Juliet is going to confessions for the wedding.
In the 1996 version of Romeo and Juliet, she did not love Paris, but it seemed that Paris loved Juliet or was deeply obseesed with her that he would ask for her hand in marriage.
Capulet promises Paris that Juliet will marry him three days from then.
when she encounters paris and the friar, paris is still under the impression that he is going to marry juliet; however, juliet is already secretly married to romeo. So the dramatic irony is that we know juliet has a plan to get out of marrying paris and that she's already married, but paris does not know any of this
Paris is there, arranging his wedding to Juliet.