Romeo and Juliet. When Juliet, who is a Capulet, finds out Romeo is a Montague, she is torn because of her feelings toward him, and the feelings her family has towards his family, or in this case, his name. She is saying the feelings she has shouldn't change just because she learned his last name. Everyone knows what a rose is and how it smells, but what if we called it something we know to be ugly and capable of hurting you, like a cactus? It would still be pretty and smell wonderful, making a name just that....a name.
It is an oft quoted phrase but it is not from any of Shakespeare's plays.
The infinitive phrase plays the role of an adverb in this sentence. It tells why you met at the park. In the sentence "You met at the park to run", "to run" is the infinitive phrase.
The infinitive phrase "to set up" plays the role of the noun.
tell me
The phrase "When you assume, you make an ass out of you and me" is a popular saying that highlights the pitfalls of making assumptions. While its exact origin is unclear, it is often attributed to comedian and actor Al Franken, who used it in his 1976 book "The Truth: With Jokes." The phrase cleverly plays on the word "assume" by breaking it down into "ass" + "u" + "me," emphasizing the negative consequences of assuming without verifying facts. Its widespread use in various contexts has contributed to its enduring popularity.
I think it is B12 because its another name is Cynocobalamine. RITURAJ
It is an oft quoted phrase but it is not from any of Shakespeare's plays.
The infinitive phrase plays the role of an adverb in this sentence. It tells why you met at the park. In the sentence "You met at the park to run", "to run" is the infinitive phrase.
i think it joni mitcell "last time i saw richard" from "blue"
chromatic. A chromatic scale plays every half-step tone.
The phrase "all that glisters is not gold" is found in The Merchant of Venice.
It is an Australian expression meaning to feign sleep or death, in order to deceive an opponent
No
The infinitive phrase "to set up" plays the role of the noun.
The stomach, I believe contains hydrochloric acid. HCl.
Seven days 'til Sunday is a common phrase that means the chances of something being completed successfully are very low. The phrase plays on that fact that week days function in a continuous loop.
No Shakespeare play contains the phrase "you knew him well". Not even close. The nearest is this quotation from All's Well That Ends Well: "It were fit you knew him; lest, reposing too far in his virtue, which he hath not, he might at some great and trusty business in a main danger fail you." This snarky comment is about the rascal and coward Parolles. There are ten more places in Shakespeare's plays where the phrase "knew him" appears.