According to my copy of the play, that line is "I will confess to you that I love him." Paris is trying to get Juliet to say that she loves him. Instead, she says that she loves Friar Lawrence. She's trying to avoid saying that she has feelings for Paris.
There are four "scene fours" in the play in each of Acts one, two, three and four.
There are four scene fives in Romeo and Juliet (one in each of acts 1, 2, 3, and 4). Which scene 5 are you talking about?
Her father is trying to force her to marry Paris when she is already married to Romeo.
There are a number of scenes in the play which are Scene IV: four, to be precise. You will have to say which act you are talking about.
In Act 4, Scene 4 of Romeo and Juliet, Lord Capulet sends the Nurse to wake Juliet early so that she can prepare for her wedding to Paris. Lord Capulet is eager to move forward with the marriage plans, despite Juliet's objections.
The first four lines of the prologue rhyme the words "dignity", "scene", "mutiny" and "unclean".
Mercutio and Romeo make puns about names, love, and physical appearance in Act 2, Scene 4 of "Romeo and Juliet."
I think she says some in act two, scene four
Juliet - The Four Pennies song - was created in 1964.
If those scenes were left out, and we jumped straight from Act 2 Scene 3 to Act 3 Scene 1, we would not be sure whether or not Romeo and Juliet are actually married. The fact that they are, which is underlined by these three scenes, makes sense of the tension Romeo experiences in 3,1 and the conflict Juliet feels in 3,2. Act 2 Scene 4 also tells us that Tybalt is out there somewhere gunning for Romeo, as he told us he would do in 1,5, in the discussion between Mercutio and Benvolio. Mercutio in this scene wants to make fun of the Nurse which sets up a sort of lighthearted conflict between them. The Nurse is annoyed, but not hurt in any way. In the next scene there is further lighthearted banter, this time between the Nurse and Juliet. The Nurse's teasing causes some conflict with Juliet but not much. Act 2 Scene 6, which is the scene of Romeo, Juliet and the Friar preparing for the wedding, has no conflict in it whatsoever. Everyone is set on completing the marriage.
Before the party in scene 4 of Romeo and Juliet, Romeo and his friends decide to attend the Capulet party in disguise. They plan to sneak in and Romeo hopes to see Rosaline, whom he is infatuated with.
Romeo and Juliet meet four times in the play: at Capulet's party, in Juliet's backyard, at Friar Lawrence's cell, and in Juliet's bedroom. After meeting Juliet at the party, Romeo leaves alone, ditching his friends, and climbs into Juliet's backyard. After the Balcony Scene, he goes to Friar Lawrence to arrange the wedding. After the wedding he goes and meets Mercutio (and, unexpectedly, Tybalt) After the wedding night, he leaves Verona and goes to Mantua.