"Romeo, who you know I hate". Juliet does a lot of lying to her mother in this scene. She is trying to equivocate, but it sometimes just comes out as fibs.
The love scene from Romeo and Juliet?
An example is the coincidence that in Act 5 Scene3 Romeo goes to visit Juliet at the grave at the same time that PAris does
The Montagues and the Capulets from Shakespeare's play, Romeo and Juliet.
"My lips, two blushing pilgrims"; "he's a man of wax."
an example of dramatic irony in Romeo and Juliet act 3 scene 2 is when Juliet is talking to herself at the beginning of the act. some examples of this are when she says "that runaways' eyes may wink: and, romeo, leap to these arms, untalk'd of and unseen,
When Friar Lawrence keeps the secret of Juliet and Romeo loving each other when Romeo is banished The poison part etc it's called I actually read the play
That word does not appear in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Maybe it is in some other one.
Some examples of well known classical ballets are The Nutcracker, Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty and Romeo and Juliet.
There is a lot more bad communication than good, but the following set of communications works great: Juliet tells Romeo she will send a messenger to him in the morning. She does, and her messenger finds Romeo. Romeo sends a message to Juliet to meet him at Friar Lawrence's cell. The message is correctly delivered. She goes there and he meets her just like he said he would.
Both Romeo and Juliet die, briefly, Romeo believes Juliet to be dead, so he drinks some poison, then when Juliet finds Romeo dead, she stabs herself with his dagger. Paris also dies, killed by Romeo. And Tybalt and Mercutio earlier on. And Mrs. Montague dies offstage
When she first saw him, she knew that there had to be something imposible about him from the start. She was right, he was a Monotauge.
When Juliet finds Romeo dead she takes his dagger and stabs herself in the heart with it.