It is Tuesday because on Monday, Tybalt was killed and Romeo was banished. Then on Tuesday, Juliet talks to Friar Lawrence and her father wants to speed up the wedding to Wednesday (the next day)
Basically the Romans created the first format of acts and scenes. An act is a part of a play normally defined by its content such as rising action, a climax and a resolution. A scene is a part of an act defined normally with the changing of characters.
All of the action from Act 2 Scene 2 until Act 3 Scene 5 seem to take place on the same day. That is, Romeo and Juliet spend all night talking until daybreak (2,2), Romeo meets with the friar (2,3), the Nurse comes to meet with Romeo (2,4), the Nurse redelivers his message to Juliet (2,5), Romeo and Juliet are married (2,6), Romeo kills Tybalt and is banished (3,1) and escapes to the friar's cell (3,3) while Capulet and Paris arrange a marriage (3,4) all in the same day. And Paris specifically says in 3,4 that the day is Monday.
This is from a script. Act 3 is the third part of the play or show. Scene 3 is the third scene in that part. It's like Chapter 3, third paragraph in a fiction book - just a way to know where you are in the show.
It's Monday, the same day as in the next scene where Capulet tells us that it is Monday.
It is 4/20 a day of great celebrations
You have to specify the play.
wedneday
She is in Act 1 Scene 2 ("Hamlet, cast thy nighted colour off."), Act 2 Scene 2 ("I doubt it is no other but the main: his father's death and our o'erhasty marriage"), Act 3 Scene 1 ("And for your part, Ophelia, I wish that your good beauties be the happy cause of Hamlet's wildness"), Act 3, Scene 2 ("The lady doth protest too much methinks"), Act 3, Scene 4 (The Closet Scene, her big scene "O Hamlet thou hast cleft my heart in twain!"), Act 4, Scene 1 ("Mad as the sea and wind when both contend"), Act 4 Scene 5 ("So full of artful jealousy is guilt it spills itself in fearing to be spilt"), Act 4 Scene 7 ("There is a willow grows aslant the brook"), and Act 5 Scene 2 ("No, no, the drink, the drink!") That's nine of the twenty scenes--she's on stage a lot.
Part of a play (Section) Part of a play (Section)
Basically, he tells them to act in a natural way.
Horatio plans to go meet Hamlet at Elsinore, which he does in Act 1 Scene 2. Horatio plans to meet Hamlet on the battlements, which he does in Act I Scene 4. Horatio plans to meet Hamlet at the play, and does in Act 3 Scene 2. Horatio has no plans to meet Hamlet in England.
The last scene in Act III is the closet scene in which Hamlet kills Polonius, Gertrude recognizes that Claudius may have murdered Hamlet Senior and the Ghost makes a reappearance telling Hamlet to get on with it.
There is : Act 1 scene 1 Act 1 scene 2 Act 1 scene 3 Act 1 scene 4 Act 1 scene 5 Act 2 scene 1 Act 2 scene 2 Act 2 scene 3 Act 2 scene 4 Act 2 scene 5 Act 2 scene 6 Act 3 scene 1 Act 3 scene 2 Act 3 scene 3 Act 3 scene 4 Act 3 scene 5 Act 4 scene 1 Act 4 scene 2 Act 4 scene 3 Act 4 scene 4 Act 4 scene 5 Act 5 scene 1 Act 5 scene 2 Act 5 scene 3 x meikaah
In Act 2, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet, the event where Friar Laurence agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet takes place last in his cell.
Juliet finds out what happened in Act 3 Scene 1.
Everything from Act 2 Scene 3 to Act 3 Scene 5 both inclusive.
It depends which scene 3. At the end of Act 1 Scene 3 she's a bit bewildered by this sudden talk of marriage. At the end of Act 2 Scene 3, she's waiting at home very impatiently. At the end of Act 3 Scene 3 she is miserable. At the end of Act 4 Scene 3 she is a little fearful but is determined to go along with the friar's plan. At the end of Act 5 Scene 3 she is dead.
Act 2, scene 3
Act 3 scene 2
Act 3 Scene 2.
"The most important scenes in Romeo and Juliet are Act 1 Scene 2, Act 2 Scene 6 and Act 4, Scene 2." Or substitute other scenes ad lib.
act 5 scene 3
There are two murderers in act 3 scene 3 in Macbeth.
She is in Act 1 Scene 2 ("Hamlet, cast thy nighted colour off."), Act 2 Scene 2 ("I doubt it is no other but the main: his father's death and our o'erhasty marriage"), Act 3 Scene 1 ("And for your part, Ophelia, I wish that your good beauties be the happy cause of Hamlet's wildness"), Act 3, Scene 2 ("The lady doth protest too much methinks"), Act 3, Scene 4 (The Closet Scene, her big scene "O Hamlet thou hast cleft my heart in twain!"), Act 4, Scene 1 ("Mad as the sea and wind when both contend"), Act 4 Scene 5 ("So full of artful jealousy is guilt it spills itself in fearing to be spilt"), Act 4 Scene 7 ("There is a willow grows aslant the brook"), and Act 5 Scene 2 ("No, no, the drink, the drink!") That's nine of the twenty scenes--she's on stage a lot.