Romeo shows archtype behavior to that of a "heartbroken" teen
list three examples of scenes from act 1 romeo and juliet that show comic elements?
Benvolio is worried about Romeo's sudden change in mood and behavior at the party. He tries to calm Romeo down and advises him to not act impulsively.
True
Romeo lives with his parents. In Act 1 Scene 1 Mrs. Montague is worried because she doesn't know where Romeo is and asks Benvolio to go find him. Typical mother of a teenager.
In Act 2, Scene 4 of Romeo and Juliet, the obstacle in Romeo’s way is Mercutio and Benvolio's attempts to locate him, as they are trying to find Romeo before the Capulet’s party. They are concerned about his behavior and are looking for him to prevent any trouble.
Tybalt
Romeo and Juliet decide that they want to marry each other, Romeo arranges it and by the end of the act they are married.
Tybalt calls Romeo a "villain" in Act 3, Scene 1 of Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo was banned because he killed Tybalt.
In Act 1 of Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare accurately portrays a teenager in love through Romeo's impulsive and dramatic behavior. He quickly falls in and out of love, is moody and emotional, and acts on his feelings without much thought to the consequences. This resonates with the intensity and impulsivity often associated with teenage love.
Every scene where Romeo and Juliet are involved after they meet in Act 1 Scene 5, they are trying to keep their relationship secret. Pick one at random.
The term "rising action" is a term which only has application to a critical device called Freytag's Pyramid, in which it refers to the action in Act 2 of a typical five-act play, and by "typical" I here mean a Shakespearean Tragedy, since the Freytag Pyramid doesn't always fit the histories and comedies. Since the Prologue of Romeo and Juliet is not a five-act play (it is in fact a sonnet), the Freytag Pyramid and therefore the term "rising action" cannot apply to it. You could probably see that coming when you heard it was a prologue, since there is never any action of any kind in a Prologue (if there were, it would be an "Induction", as in The Taming of the Shrew).