I think that you have your Act and/or scene wrong. Act I, scene v opens with the servants cleaning up after the banquet.
Juliet is annoyed at the beginning of Act II, scene v because the nurse is taking so long to return from her meeting with Romeo.
Juliet is anxious at the beginning of Act III, scene ii because she wants the day to end so that she can be with Romeo (her bridegroom).
He is upset becaus eht eone girl he loved just broke up with him and he feels all depressed, lonely, and unloved.
At the beginning of Act IV Scene 3, Juliet tells the nurse that she wants to be left alone to pray.
Act IV Scene 3. It is the beginning of her soliloquy before taking the potion.
Romeo and Juliet hold conversations in Act I Scene 5, Act II Scene 2, Act II Scene 6 and Act III Scene 5.
Nobody, actually. Paris only approaches Capulet about marrying Juliet in scene 2, which is halfway through Act One.
in the final scene, both romeo and Juliet die.
At the beginning of Act IV Scene 3, Juliet tells the nurse that she wants to be left alone to pray.
Act IV Scene 3. It is the beginning of her soliloquy before taking the potion.
Romeo and Juliet hold conversations in Act I Scene 5, Act II Scene 2, Act II Scene 6 and Act III Scene 5.
Nobody, actually. Paris only approaches Capulet about marrying Juliet in scene 2, which is halfway through Act One.
an example of dramatic irony in Romeo and Juliet act 3 scene 2 is when Juliet is talking to herself at the beginning of the act. some examples of this are when she says "that runaways' eyes may wink: and, romeo, leap to these arms, untalk'd of and unseen,
Capulet tells Paris that he can marry Juliet during the party at the beginning of Romeo and Juliet, Act 1, Scene 5. He gives his blessing to Paris and expresses his desire for Juliet to marry someone.
in the final scene, both romeo and Juliet die.
Juliet finds out what happened in Act 3 Scene 1.
It depends on what part of the play you are talking about. In Act 2 Scene 5, they've become closer than they were, but in Act 3 Scene 5 they are further apart.
Act V, Scene III. It is the last scene in the play.
Act 4 Scene 3
Act 4 Scene 3