It depends on what you mean by real. There really were two families called Montecchi and Capuletti who were opposed to one another because of being on opposite sides of the Italian conflict between the Guelfs and the Ghibbelines. However, only one of the families lived in Verona, and the story of Romeo and Juliet did not actually happen to them. So although they were real families and they did feud, their feud was not the "Romeo and Juliet family feud". Since the Romeo and Juliet story is a fiction, the feud is only real within the context of the story. In that sense, and in that sense only, the feud is as real as Romeo and Juliet's love.
Yes, Romeo and Juliet discover that they are from feuding families, the Montagues and the Capulets, after they have already fallen in love with each other. This realization adds to the tragic circumstances of their love story.
Yes.
Yes, they know this from the very start of the play.
Romeo's family are the Montagues. Juliet's are the Capulets
They were born into 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.
Montagues and Capulets
The Capulets and the Montagues.
Both stories involve feuding families.
No, Juliet is not single.
The Montagues (Romeo's family) and the Capulets (Juliets family)
After meeting, Romeo and Juliet planned to get married in secret. They hoped that this would allow them to be together despite their feuding families.
He hopes that it will reconcile the feuding families. Which it does, eventually.
Juliet is a Capulet, and Romeo is a Montague. Their families, the Capulets and the Montagues, are feuding in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."