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In Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," Mercutio's final words are "A plague o' both your houses!" before he dies. This curse foreshadows the tragic events that will result from the feud between the Montagues and the Capulets.
Mercutio says "A plague o' both your houses" in frustration at the feuding between the Capulets and Montagues, which led to his own death. He is expressing his anger at the senseless violence caused by their rivalry.
He is calling a plague down on both the Montagues and the Capulets because their feud has led to his death
A curse
They quarantined the houses and burned the bodies. It didn't work much.
The prince states that hes got MONTAGUE IN HIS BLOOD, so he's a Montague. Actually the prince does not say that he has "Montague in his blood" at all. He does say: "Capulet, Montague, see what a scourge is laid upon your hate, that heaven finds means to kill your joys with love. And I, for winking at your discords too, have lost a brace of kinsmen." Capulet and Montague have lost their "joys", their children. But the Prince has lost kinsmen over and above those, and just two of them (Mercutio and Paris). The Prince, Mercutio and Paris belong to a family that is neither Montague nor Capulet. That is why Mercutio says, "A plague on both your houses." He is cursing Montagues and Capulets, but not his own house, which is different.
It is foreshadowing that Mercutio is going to tomorrow. Grave is being used as a pun.
your moms vagina
Not in the play.
Mercutio says that "dreamers often lie"
Say the number of which it is and then say the plague
Plague in noun form would be plá but if you mean plague, as in to annoy, it would be ciap.