no
the play of romeo and juliet is a sonnet,a love and a tragedy. :( :(
Extremely rapidly. They started off a conversation which is really a sonnet, and by the end, Romeo is kissing her.
The form of poetry used for the first meeting of Romeo and Juliet is a sonnet. This type of poem consists of 14 lines written in iambic pentameter with a specific rhyme scheme. In this case, Shakespeare wrote a sonnet for Romeo and Juliet when they first meet to emphasize the intensity and immediacy of their love.
No, none of the numbered sonnets in Shakespeare's collection of sonnets appear in any of the plays. And, although there are sonnets embedded in the text of Romeo and Juliet, they do not appear in The Sonnets out of context. The highly romantic text of Sonnet 18 might remind one of Romeo and Juliet but it is not connected to it in any way.
becasue he oves here
A prologue, or prolog, is an opening to a story that establishes the setting and gives background details, often some earlier story that ties into the main one, and other miscellaneous information. Prologue is not a poem.
Prologues do not have settings. They are apart from the action of the play.
During the first meeting of Romeo and Juliet they shared a dialogue of 14 lines. The 14 lines formed a perfect sonnet which emphasized the type of loved they shared for each other.
He grabs her hand and starts saying a sonnet.
All of the prologue, taken as a whole, is a sonnet. A sonnet is a fourteen-line poem with a certain structure. The Prologue is fourteen lines long and has that structure.
No, "Romeo and Juliet" is not a sonnet. It is a tragedy play written by William Shakespeare in traditional verse form. Sonnets are 14-line poems with a specific rhyme scheme, while "Romeo and Juliet" is a longer dramatic work with prose and verse sections.
The dramatic irony builds up suspense in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in the sense that neither of the main characters knows what the other is doing, which leads the tragic ending.