''If ever you disturb our streets again
Your lives shall pay the forfeit of the peace''
basically, if the feud between the Montagues and Capulets disturbs the streets of Verona again, the participants will be executed.
Well, darling, that basically means if you cause trouble on the streets again, you might end up paying the ultimate price for disturbing the peace. So, unless you want your life to become a real-life drama, I suggest you keep it cool and stay out of trouble. Simple as that.
Montague shows up in two and only two scenes in the play Romeo and Juliet: the first and the last. Let's look at the last scene. In this scene the first thing he tells the Prince (and everyone else who is there) is that his wife has died.
"If the king and prince own different carriages" is not a sentence, it is a sentence fragment, an incomplete thought.The sentence, "The king and prince own different carriages." is a complete thought, a statement. The conjunction "if" introduces a conditional clause. By removing "if", the phrase is not conditional, it is a complete thought (sentence).This sentence can be correctly completed by replacing nouns with the following pronouns (in bold):"He and the prince own different carriages.""The king and he own different carriages.""They own different carriages.""The king and prince own them."
my prince is 'mon prince' in French.
i believe the homophone for prince is prints
No. He is the Prince of Verona and the voice of reason between the Capulet and Montague families, but he is not a member of either family.
that poopo
Neither. He is related to the Prince. That is why he was invited to the Capulets' party. However, he hangs around with Romeo and Benvolio and the other Montagues and really doesn't like Tybalt much.
Count Paris is a kinsman of the Prince of Verona and is not directly related to either the Capulet or Montague family. He is engaged to Juliet in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."
The CAPULET'S party
there are none that we know of
Montague was to later meet Prince Escalus in his castle in Freetown, which was the common judgment place.
Romeo Juliet Lord Capulet & Lady Capulet Lord Montague & Lady Montague Mercutio Benvolio Tybalt Paris Friar Lawrence Nurse The Prince
"Don't fight any more."
Montague servants Sampson and Gregory, followed by Capulet servants, then the Prince
The characters were: Romeo, Juliet, Lord Capulet, Lady Capulet, Lord Montague, Lady Montague, The Nurse, County Paris, Prince Escalus, Friar Lawrence, Friar John, Mercutio, Balthasar, Benvolio, Tybalt, Samson, and Gregory.
The Prince decrees that if a Montague or Capulet break the peace again they will be sentenced to death.