Nobody. It is very difficult to identify a quotation when you change the words around, especially words like "I" and "you". Anyway, the line you are probably thinking of is:
Where I have learn'd me to repent the sin
Of disobedient opposition
To you and your behests, and am enjoin'd
By holy Laurence to fall prostrate here,
And beg your pardon: pardon, I beseech you!
Henceforward I am ever ruled by you.
This is Juliet apologising to her father, and promising to obey him (with her fingers crossed behind her back).
This line is spoken by Friar Laurence, a character in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet". He is reflecting on the consequences of his own actions and seeking forgiveness for going against his own principles.
Juliet was telling her father in act 4 scene 2.
No, Juliet is not single.
Lord Capulet: "Hang thee, young baggage! Disobedient wretch!"Juliet: "Go, counsellor! Thou and my bosom henceforth shall be twain!"Oh, hang on, these show that Juliet is disobedient. This is as good description of her as its opposite.
Capulet says this line to Juliet in Act 3, Scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet. He is angered by Juliet's disobedience and defiance of his wishes for her to marry Paris.
Her father. She says she is sorry for being disobedient and she'll marry Paris if that is what he wants. Like many apologies to parents, this is a flat-out lie.
No, Juliet does not cancel her marriage with Romeo. Despite facing opposition from their families, Juliet marries Romeo in secret.
Romeo and Juliet (1935), Romeo & Juliet (1968) and Romeo+Juliet (1996).
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In Act IV Scene 2 she tells her father she was at Friar Lawrence's cell. This is true. She says she met Paris there. Also true. She says that Friar Lawrence told her to fall prostrate and beg her father's pardon. This also is true. When she says, "I have learned me to repent the sin of disobedient opposition to you and your behests." This is the lie; she has learned no such thing. She does not lie about where she has been, but she does lie about her real thoughts and feelings.
After Romeo and Juliet married Romeo owned Juliet and everything she owed as well.
It is not so much their parents' opposition to their love, since their parents don't find out about it until the very end of the play. It is more the anticipation of parental opposition that causes the problems. Romeo and Juliet want to keep their secret marriage a secret until it is consummated so their parents will have no chance of forcibly divorcing them. However, by that time Romeo is banished and the problem has become worse, since Juliet's mother is now talking about taking out a contract on Romeo's life, and she doesn't even know what he's done to Juliet. The chief obstacle to their love is now the fact that Romeo is in Mantua and Juliet is in Verona, but the secrecy in which their relationship is clothed, because of the fear of their parents' opinions, prevents Juliet from using more straightforward methods of joining Romeo.