Juliet tells her mother that she is crying over Tybalt's death and Romeo's banishment. She masks her feelings for Romeo by appearing to be mourning her cousin's death.
Lady Capulet believes that Juliet is crying because of her cousin Tybalt death
Lady Capulet imagines that Juliet is crying because Tybalt, Lady Capulet's kinsman and consequently also Juliet's, is dead.
As Romeo enters the Capulet ballroom he spys his love,Rosealine, whom he has spent days walking and crying to himself about, as she does not love him back. As he thinks he will never get over her, in comes Juliet and romeos in love again.
Shes on her period
She was heartbroken. She cried and cried. Her father thought that she was crying about Tybalt but she wasn't--it was about Romeo.
Romeo is crying because he believes Juliet is dead. Juliet's family has arranged for her to marry Paris, so Romeo goes to her tomb to say goodbye. When he sees her seemingly lifeless body, he is devastated and believes she is truly dead.
I think it is that she is crying and crying and she will kill her self if romeo is killed but i am not positive
Juliet's parents think she is so sad because they believe she is grieving over the death of her cousin Tybalt. They assume her tears are for Tybalt when in reality she is crying over Romeo's banishment.
Capulet plans the marriage with Paris because when Romeo is banished from Verona for killing Tybalt, and Juliet is crying, he thinks that Juliet is crying because her cousin Tybalt is dead, when instead she is crying because Romeo has been banished. So to cheer her up, he insists she gets married in 2 days.
Shakespeare used the verb "to stint" various times, always in the sense of "to reduce in intensity." So basically it meant almost the same then as it does now, which is "To restrict or limit, as in amount or number; be sparing with" So when the Nurse said the infant Juliet was crying and then "stinted" she means that Juliet stopped crying so loudly.
Because Romeo has a good reputation-- "Verona brags of him to be a virtuous and well-governed youth (I, v, 66-67)." He also says that Tybalt is being immature and behaving stupidly, he is going to cause a riot. He is not behaving properly for a party; he should be happy and having a good time, instead of trying to start a fight. He also tells him to leave Romeo alone because the Prince has declared that there shall be no more fights, and if there are then they will pay with their lives.
Little Boy Crying by Mervyn Morris is a poem about childhood. It is based on a fathers memories of how he treated his little boy when he was three years old.