Mercutio
Love and love only..:(
it is the tomato the tomato is the love fruit
No Not so long as you dont let that love interfere with the quality of your life or health.
The love of time.
Love grass refers to any of several annual or perennial grasses of the genus Eragrostis, which are cultivated for their delicate, spraylike flower-spikes. Love grass reproduces both sexually and asexually.
Who teases romeo about rosaline and his love sickness?
Mercutio accuses Romeo of being afflicted by love-sickness, specifically for Rosaline. He mocks Romeo for his infatuation, attributing his behavior to being love-struck.
Romeo's friends Mercutio and Benvolio tease him about his unrequited love for Rosaline in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." They often mock Romeo for his lovesickness and obsession with Rosaline, which sets the stage for his eventual meeting with Juliet.
Mercurio teases Romeo because he is preoccupied with love for Rosaline and is neglecting his friendships. Mercurio uses light-hearted teasing to try to snap Romeo out of his lovesick mood and engage with his friends.
At the opening of Romeo and Juliet, Benvolio teases Romeo about being in love with Rosaline. Romeo is having no success with Rosaline (and in fact he goes to the Capulet's ball because he believes she will be there). We do not know if Rosaline is Romeo's first love - for all we know he may have had many girlfriends before her. But she never appears in the play, and as soon as Romeo sees Juliet he forgets all about her. I thought that he went becasue his friend made him go!
In Act 1, Scene 4 of Romeo and Juliet, Mercutio makes a reference to Cupid when he talks about love and its effects on people. He teases Romeo by joking that he has been hit by Cupid's arrow and is now love-sick because of his feelings for Rosaline.
The pun: "Prick love for pricking, and you beat love down" (1.4.28). In Mercutio's view, Romeo's love-sickness is caused by a lack of sex; if he's just have some, he'd get over thinking that he needs to be in love.
In Act 2, Scene 4 of "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo and Mercutio exchange witty banter as they wait for Juliet's Nurse to arrive. Mercutio teases Romeo about his infatuation with Juliet and his love troubles. Their dialogue is humorous and light-hearted, showcasing Mercutio's clever wit and Romeo's preoccupation with love.
It's ironic that when Mercutio teases Romeo about being in love with Rosaline, Romeo is really in love with Juliet. It's ironic that the Friar advises Romeo to "love moderately" as he is about to perform the very sudden marriage between the passionate young people. Friar Laurence points out an irony as he gathers herbs: used correctly, poisonous herbs can cure disease, and vice-versa. This irony is mirrored in the play as whole, in which an good thing, the love of Romeo and Juliet, leads to their deaths, and a bad thing, the deaths of Romeo and Juliet, leads to a good thing, the end of the feud between the families.
At first, he is love sick with Rosaline, his neice, but when he attended the Capulet's ball, he instantly forgets about Rosaline and is deeply in love with Juliet, a Capulet.
Mercutio teases Romeo using wordplay, puns, and metaphorical language to mock his lovesickness for Rosaline. He often uses humor and wit to challenge Romeo's infatuation and to urge him to be more lighthearted and carefree. Mercutio's playful use of language serves to both entertain and provoke Romeo, highlighting his own devil-may-care attitude towards love and life.
Juliet: "Romeo, Romeo, Wherefore art thou Romeo?"