"Oh, happy dagger! This is thy sheath" Followed closely by "Urgh!" or some similar sound.
Those are the first lines of Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare
In Act 1 scene 2 Paris asks Juliet's father if he can marry her. However, in Act 1 Scene 5 Romeo also starts getting ideas along those lines.
She cut herself on the thigh to prove her strength of character to him
Signs of evidence of stabbing in a homicide would be slit shaped wounds in the victim. Another sign could be excessive loss of blood from those wounds.
In those lines, Romeo compares love to a rough sea that is difficult to navigate, suggesting that love can be turbulent and unpredictable, with highs and lows like the waves of the ocean.
Those lines are perpendicular.Those lines are perpendicular.Those lines are perpendicular.Those lines are perpendicular.
If they are set next to each other and never cross.Edit by Gamerkid26:_________________ Those two lines are parallel.// Those two lines are also parallel.So are those two.\\ And those two./\ These lines are NOT parallel.======================
Those little lines above or below a music staff are called ledger lines.
Not always. If you were to extend those lines by infinity and have them never run into each other, those are parallel lines.
Romeo, Juliet, the Prince, Benvolio and Friar Lawerence. There are probably many others but those are the main ones.
Romeo speaks first.
Those lines are called longitude and latitude.