Nobody can remember when the fight started or what it was about
The long-standing feud between the Capulets and Montagues is shown in the prologue of Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet," where it is stated that the families have been enemies for many years. Additionally, the ongoing conflict is evident in the public brawl between the two households in Act 1, scene 1, demonstrating the deep-rooted animosity between them.
In Shakespeare's play 'Romeo and Juliet' the two families which have been feuding for years are Romeo's family, the Montagues, and Juliet's family, the Capulets.
The prince mentions that the feud between the Capulets and Montagues has been ongoing for years and has caused disturbances and bloodshed in Verona. He emphasizes the tragic consequences of the feud and warns that further conflicts will be met with severe punishment.
The way it was solved was that when Romeo and Juliet died the families realize that if they hadn't been feuding their children would still be alive. (it's really sad that it takes death for them to realize their stupidity.)
"Three civil brawls, born of an airy word" Three times, apparently.
Romeo has been hiding in Mantua during the fight between the Capulets and Montagues. The problem is that he is suffering from unrequited love for Rosaline at the beginning of the play.
Prince Escalus has not been involved in any physical fights in the play "Romeo and Juliet." He tries to keep the peace between the Capulets and Montagues in Verona.
The prince calls forward Capulet and Montague to put an end to their longstanding feud that has been causing violence and chaos in Verona. He wants them to understand the consequences of their actions and to reconcile their differences for the sake of peace in the city.
The characters of Romeo and Juliet are fictional, and thus no photographs of them exist. Even had they been real, they would have died long, long before the invention of photography.
The complete verb is 'have been feuding'; 'have' and 'been' are auxiliary verbs and feuding is the main verb.
To help romeo get to mantua without the "prince" knowing since he has been vanished and making it possible for him and Juliet to be together
It may have been to hide his own shame and guilt as the Friar allowed, as well as, officiated Romeo & Julietβs marriage. Now that he may potentially have a role in bigamy, he may want to cover up the situation altogether which could be his ulterior motive when devising the plan for Juliet.
The characters in the story were figments of William Shakespeare's imagination, or more accurately, the figments of the imagination of the people who had thought up the story which Shakespeare adapted. There really were two families in Italy called the Montecchi and Capelletti, from whom the Montagues and Capulets may have been drawn, since they are referred to in Dante's Divine Comedy. The Romeo and Juliet story is, however, pure fiction.