They make two arrangements. Both retaining on revolving around the idea that you should not rely your education on answers.com
Romeo arranges to secretly marry Juliet with the help of the Nurse. He sets a time and place for the wedding and relies on the Nurse to facilitate their plan.
Nothing. He asks the Nurse to get a rope ladder. Juliet asks "Are those the cords that Romeo bid thee fetch?" The nurse had to get the ladder; Romeo didn't give it to her.
She arrives many times throughout the play and acts differently each time.
By giving him a rope ladder.
She gives him a rope ladder
Her express purpose is to make the wedding arrangements. While she is about it, she warns Romeo not to mistreat Juliet.
He is hanging around when the Nurse comes to make the wedding arrangements and annoys her with his dirty jokes.
In both the play and the movie, it is the nurse who raised Juliet, who carries the wedding information between Romeo and Juliet.
They make fun of the nurse and when she says she needs to talk to Romeo mercutio wants to make fun of Romeo for it but benvoilo tries to prevent it.
Actually all the arrangements for their wedding are made through the Nurse and Friar Lawrence, so Romeo cannot tell Juliet anything of the kind. The nurse makes the suggestion that Juliet should get permission to go to confession so she can get to the church on time.
The Nurse. :)
Friar Laurence meets with Romeo to confirm that he has made wedding arrangements with Juliet. He wants to make sure that everything is in place for their secret wedding.
Romeo has killed Tybalt and has to leave town quick. He is currently hiding in Friar Lawrence's cell. The nurse is to go there, take him a ring, and tell him to come to Juliet and say good-bye. Which he does, though the good-bye bit takes him all night. If you know what i mean.
In Act II, Scene 5, Juliet is impatient for the nurse to arrive to tell her what arrangements Romeo has made for their wedding. In Act III, Scene 2, Juliet is impatient for Romeo to arrive so they can lose their virginities. The Nurse is to bring the rope ladder for Romeo to climb up to Juliet's bedroom window, which is why, when the nurse arrives, she says: "What hast thou there? The cords that Romeo bid thee fetch?" But Juliet expresses no impatience for the rope ladder, only for Night to come and "bring me my Romeo."
No, the nurse does not die in the Romeo and Juliet Play.
he makes fun of nurse
The Nurse promises Juliet that she will go find Romeo and talk to him for her