What part of the play are you thinking of? In Act 1 shetells themshe will not promise to marry Paris, but will look him over at the party.
The nurse tells Juliet that Paris is also interested in marrying her.
Hard to say, because she is not anyone's friend, unless you count Romeo. The Nurse is Juliet's friend but Juliet does not fill that role for the Nurse.
no
Juliet says "Blistered be thy tongue for such a wish" to the Nurse in response to her suggestion that Juliet should marry Paris. Juliet is frustrated and upset at the Nurse's suggestion because she thought the Nurse was on her side and now feels betrayed. Juliet wishes harm upon the Nurse for proposing something that goes against her feelings and desires.
Nurse tells Juliet to "seek happy nights, to happy days". This could show how the Nurse cares more about Juliet because she cares more about her happiness than following in the lead of the stereotypical Elizabethan woman. You can then go on to further devolp this and posssibly say that the Nurse considers Juliet to be like her own child (which is dead at this point in time) to fill the void of her dead child and husband.
The Nurse counsels Juliet to commit bigamy by marrying Paris when she's already married to Romeo.
The nurse tells Juliet to "get on with her life" so -to-say. The nurse recommended that Juliet get married to Paris since Romeo had been banished from Verona, and that Juliet would never see him again, so she should move on and forget about him. Juliet's opinion of the nurse changed because she thought that the nurse was on her side, and wanted Juliet to be with romeo, so she felt somewhat "betrayed" when the nurse said this. By saying that it is alright to marry Paris, the nurse is saying that Juliet is not really married to Romeo, that their wedding was a sham and their wedding night a roll in the hay. To Juliet, who considers herself to be Romeo's wife, this is an outrage.
The Nurse tells Juliet that Paris also wants to marry her. She thinks Juliet's feelings for Paris are positive and that he is a fine gentleman who would be a good match for her.
The Nurse is only ever called the Nurse. No first or second name was provided.
She doesn't, and she doesn't have to. She is Juliet's servant.
In Act II Scene 5, the nurse is returning from her meeting with Romeo the morning after the balcony scene. At this meeting she was to discuss with Romeo the question of a wedding for Romeo and Juliet. Juliet is anxious; what a guy might think and say in the dark of the night under the influence of the moonlight might look different in the cold light of day. "At lovers' perjuries, they say, Jove laughs." She wants to know what the nurse has found out. The nurse is two and one half hours late. When she does show up, she talks about everything and anything except what Romeo has said to her. She says her bones ache, she says she is out of breath, she asks if Juliet has had something to eat, she asks where Mrs. Capulet is. And when Juliet starts to lose it from the frustration, the nurse says huffily that if Juliet is going to be that way she can run her own errands! It's a great scene and very funny if played well.
Tybalt is the son of the brother of Juliet's mother. That is to say, Tybalt's father and Juliet's mother were brother and sister. This means, of course, that Tybalt was not a Capulet, since it was Juliet's father and his brothers and sisters who were the Capulets.