The Nurse
Juliet's mother describes Paris as an "unbound book" because he is waiting to be 'unlocked' or revealed, just like the pages of a book need to be opened to discover its contents. She believes that once Juliet gets to know Paris, she will see his true worth and find happiness in their relationship.
True...
OF COURSE ITS NOT TRUE its not true she sings like a girl acts like 1 n not 2 be Rude but she has girl Parts
"I'll look to love if looking liking move." This is an example of Shakespeare playing with words. He is punning on "look", meaning both "look forward to" and "see". He is also making a tongue-twister with "looking liking". What she means is "If when I look at Paris it moves me to like him, I'll look forward to love." Shakespeare's is much more elegant, of course.
Finding true love. first trying with Rosaline then with Juliet.
In Act 3, Scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet, Juliet tells her mother that she eagerly awaits news of her future husband. While Lady Capulet assumes Juliet is referring to Paris, Juliet is actually talking about Romeo, demonstrating her wit and deception by using ambiguous language to mislead her parents about her true feelings. This double entendre adds depth to Juliet's character as she navigates the complexities of her forbidden romance.
to get a boner
In Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, Juliet is indeed about two weeks away from her fourteenth birthday. She is thirteen. But this is not a "true fact" in the same way it would be if Romeo and Juliet were real people rather than characters in a play.
True. The moment of catharsis in the play "Romeo and Juliet" occurs when the two central characters, Romeo and Juliet, kill themselves in a tragic act of love and sacrifice.
Paris doesn't really love Juliet. His feelings for Juliet are as conventional as Romeo's were for Rosaline. Paris does not know Juliet; he has not spent any time talking to her; he does not seem to want to bother about finding out what she wants. This is not love. When they meet at Friar Lawrence's cell, he takes it for granted that she must love him and does not pay any attention to the signals she is giving that she does not. After her supposed death, Paris acts as he supposes that a man ought to act in his position. He buys flowers to put on her grave and spouts bad poetry. He does all this about a woman we know he barely knew. Also, even if Paris loved Juliet, Juliet didn't even like him, and that is not true love.
In "Romeo and Juliet," other characters who express interest in marrying Juliet are Paris and Count Paris. However, Juliet's true love is Romeo, which leads to the tragic events of the play.
Yes, Romeo's feelings for Juliet are more passionate and intense compared to his feelings for Rosaline. With Juliet, he experiences true love, while with Rosaline, it seems more like infatuation. Juliet inspires Romeo to be more mature and responsible, while Rosaline's rejection leads him to despair.