Yes. Did you notice how many servants he keeps employed?
Yes. Did you notice how many servants he keeps employed?
None. The only rich lord around is the County Paris, and he does not appear to have a job. Montague and Capulet are not lords (although they are rich), despite the fact that many people erroneously call them "Lord Capulet" and "Lord Montague". They are strictly middle class guys.
Yes, the capulets were only a little bit richer than the Montegue's, but the montegue's are still rich :)
He wanted to marry her, perhaps in part because she was apparently good-looking but mostly because whoever married her would "have the chinks"--which is to say he would become very rich.
Yes Tybalt is a Capulet he is Lord Capulet's nephew.
Do you mean from the play Romeo and Juliet? I have always pictured her as rather mild and unassuming. Not much is said about the parents other than they didn't like each others families. It was the father's who enforced any actions within the play.
Tybalt is associated with the Capulets, and he thinks of himself as a Capulet, but he is actually not a Capulet at all. He is the son of Lady Capulet's brother, and Lady Capulet is only a Capulet by marriage. That is why it is Lady Capulet, and not Lord Capulet, who is so furious with Romeo after he kills Tybalt.
Because Paris was married already, but his wife died, so Lady Capulet knows that he has experience with marriage and that he is going to be a good husband.That was just made up; it doesn't say anything in the text about Paris having been married before. The reason the Capulets are pushing for a marriage with Paris is that he is nobility-a "county"-whereas although they are rich (they "have the chinks") they are not noble. Capulet in the play is just "Capulet" not "Lord Capulet" as many people want to call him. They are a strictly middle-class outfit.
Lady Capulet is busy preparing for the Capulet's masquerade ball.
Samson is a Capulet, or to be more accurate, he is a servant of the Capulets. He is not a member of the Capulet family, just someone who works for them.
at the Capulet house in the yard... i think.
The line "Is she a Capulet?" is said by Romeo in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet". He utters this line when he first sees Juliet at the Capulet's party and realizes she is from the rival Capulet family.