Dialogue (spelled dialog in the US and its colonies) is conversations strictly between two people, but more loosely including groups. Everything that people say in the play apart from soliloquys and the two prologues is a part of a dialogue.
Although there are a number of monologues in Act five of Romeo and Juliet, the bread-and-butter of the act is, as it usually is, dialogue. Paris and his Page, Romeo and Balthazar, Romeo and Paris, The Friar and Balthazar, the Friar and Juliet, Montague and Capulet all have dialogues.
Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet
juliet
After Romeo and Juliet married Romeo owned Juliet and everything she owed as well.
I doubt if one could actually quantify "most famous," however, Hamlet's "To be or not to be..." or Juliet's "Romeo, O Romeo, Wherfore art thou Romeo?" would be top runners.
No dialogue is a soliloquy which is one person speaking alone to the audience. A dialogue is two characters speaking to each other. Romeo and Juliet's first dialogue takes the form of a fourteen-line poem called a sonnet.
Romeo was a Montague, Juliet was a Capulet.
Juliet Capulet is one of the leads in "Romeo & Juliet"
Romeo and Juliet get married.
ummm romeo and juliet? idiot..
Romeo and then Juliet...