"Night" is an extremely common word in Romeo and Juliet and is used all the time. Juliet uses it eleven times in her soliloquy "Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds."
No, he doesn't.
Shakespeare did use the word "confuse" but he liked the word "confound" better. Friar Lawrence uses it when Romeo and Juliet meet to be married.
The script does not specify. Use your imagination. They slept together all night.
Romeo and juliet
what object does juliet use an example of unimportance of names
Romeo says, "I have night's cloak to hide me from their eyes." in Act II Scene 2. He doesn't use the words you indicate; perhaps you are reading someone else's Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo says, "I have night's cloak to hide me from their eyes." in Act II Scene 2. He doesn't use the words you indicate; perhaps you are reading someone else's Romeo and Juliet.
Catholicism because Romeo and Juliet are Catholic and when they refer to each other they use religious imagery.
i think mmph....
Both use the Shakespeare text and have a young couple cast as Romeo and Juliet.
She plans to use it as a ladder to get Romeo into her room and "tie up the marriage" (During this time, the marriage would not be complete until the lovers had sex). Of course, this is not actually "said" in the play, but we can say that it happened between Act III Scene 3 and Act III Scene 5, since in the end Scene 3 Romeo runs to an unknown place and at the start of Scene 5 he is seen with Juliet early in the morning.
From Romeo and Juliet, Act II Scene 2, the balcony scene. Juliet cannot see Romeo; she says he is "bescreen'd in night." "Bescreen'd" is the same word as "bescreened"; the apostrophe tells us that the word is to be pronounced in two syllables not in three, "be-screend" not "be-screen-ned". You know what it means to screen something, don't you? You put something in front of it so it can't be seen. You do the screening and it gets screened. Or you can use the prefix "be" which means the same thing. If you deck something with flowers, the thing covered in flowers is "bedecked". So here is Romeo, who is hidden behind, or screened by, the night or in other words, he is bescreened by the night.