Juliet cares more about Romeo's banishment because it means she has lost her husband and her chance at a future with him. Tybalt's death was a tragedy, but Romeo's banishment directly affects Juliet's life and happiness. Juliet's love for Romeo overrides her grief for Tybalt.
He hates him because he's a Montague and because he humiliated him at the Maskerade.
I hate you so much
Because if he is banished then him and Juliet still know he's alive. If he was dead Juliet could get over his death and move on. She can't do that if he's banished.
Every play that Shakespeare did had an emotion to go with it. For exanple Romeo and Juliet had the emotion love and hate. This is way he is so famous. Each play had an emotion. For example Romeo and Juliet had the emotion love and hate
The deaths of Mercutio and Tybalt resulted in Romeo's banishment. He then lost contact with Friar Laurence, hence he was unaware of Juliet's fake death. Then he commited suicide so he could be with her.
He says he's not Romeo if she doesn't want him to be. He means that she can call him anything she likes so long as she doesn't hate him because of his name.
In Romeo and Juliet, Tybalt kills Romeo's friend Mercutio, so Romeo kills Tybalt. Romeo kills Paris and then himself thinking that Juliet in dead. Juliet wakes up from her sleep seeing Romeo dead kills herself. At the end we find out that Romeo's mother dies because of grief over the banishment of her son.
Yes! Yes He Does Hate Her So Much
After killing Tybalt and being banished, Romeo gets all emo and whiny, but the friar gets mad at him and tells him that he should be thankful for his good luck. Juliet is still alive and so Romeo can still be married to her, Tybalt failed in his plan to murder Romeo, and the law, instead of saying that Romeo must die for killing Tybalt, instead lets him live (although not in Verona). These are all things to be thankful for.
The best way to answer this question is by examining the text from Romeo's monologue to Friar Lawerance.At first Romeo reasons that there is no life for him outside of Verona. In his words, there is only "purgatory, torture, hell itself". Thus he reasons that exile is essentially a death sentence, just a more torturous one.Romeo then expands on why there is no life for him outside of Verona. He explains that everything which lives in Verona may look upon and revel, in Juliet's presence. Romeo explains that he is no longer free to do so, and knowing that would make every moment of the rest of his life a living hell.Simply put; Romeo feels that he would rather die, than live the remainer of his life without Juliet. An example of how true and pure the bond between Romeo and Juliet is.
To fleer and scorn at the Capulets. Tybalt is under the impression that Montagues all hate Capulets so much that whatever they do must in some way be insulting.