Romeo gate-crashes the Capulet party with Mercution and the Montagues, and when Tybalt tells Lord Capulet that Romeo has come uninvited, he simply shrugs it off and tells Tybalt to ignore Romeo, because he wasn't causing any trouble. Therefore, Tybalt is angered by Romeo, and the fact that nobody else cares that he is there.
He gets all fired up. He wants to go confront Romeo and fight him for coming to a Capulet party, but Lord Capulet tells him to shut up and be nice. He doesn't want the Prince coming and ending people for starting a fight.
He attempts to start a fight with Romeo and gets a strip torn off of him by Capulet. Exit Tybalt, fuming.
Tybalt wrote a letter to Romeo, challenging him to a duel. Tybalt was angry that Romeo had invaded the Capulets' party but he wasn't able to fight him then and there because he had been stopped by Capulet, his uncle.
earlier in the play, romeo crashed a Capulet party. angry, Tybalt swore revenge with a sword fight. Romeo's friend mercutio ends up fighting Tybalt, and romeo attempts to intervene by stepping between them. Tybalt stabs mercutio, despite Romeos attempts to end the fight, and mercutio dies. Romeo and Tybalt then fight, and romeo kills Tybalt, and romeo is banished from Vienna. Merutio, romeo and Tybalt sword fight.
In Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, when Lady Capulet mentions the death of Tybalt, Capulet responds with anger and tells his wife to stop talking about Tybalt's death. He also declares that Romeo and Juliet will be married on Thursday as planned.
Mercutio is spoiling for a fight with Tybalt. When Tybalt asks if he can have a word with Mercutio, Mercutio says "Why not couple it with something? Why not make it a word and a blow?" He is asking Tybalt to slap him, to challenge him to a fight. Tybalt says he would be happy to, but right now he has other fish to fry.
He calls him a villain. A pretty lame insult, and not enough to get Romeo to fight. It is enough to get Mercutio to fight, however. Killing Mercutio does for Tybalt what no insult could do--it gets Romeo to fight him. Unfortunately it does for Tybalt in another sense altogether.
Capulet Tells Tybalt That He was told He Was A Nice Boy.
Romeo refers to the Friar as his "ghostly sire" (2.2.188), so it appears that the Friar is Romeo's confessor. Also, when they speak, the Friar chides him about his yearning for Rosaline, so apparently the Friar is someone to whom the Friar has turned to for advice about love.
Benvolio was planning to go to check out the girls. He talks Romeo into coming because Rosaline, the girl who refuses to listen to Romeo's protestations of love, will be there, partying it up. Romeo's intention is to hang around Rosaline, but Benvolio is hoping that some other girl who is at the party will make Romeo forget about her. This is a plan which is more successful that Benvolio can imagine.
First, Romeo gets banished so he has to leave Verona. Second, Mrs. Capulet is so furious with him that she is prepared to send hired murderers to Mantua to kill him. Up to this point Romeo and Juliet hoped, once their marriage was consummated and could not be annulled, that their parents would accept it as a fait accompli. Now, Mrs. Capulet would sooner kill Romeo than accept him as a relative.
Act 3 scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet is set in Juliet's room. Romeo is leaving for his exile and Juliet is upset over the separation. Lady Capulet then comes into Juliet's room and informs her that she will be marrying Paris. The conflict is that Juliet's parents are forcing her to marry Paris and she is already married to Romeo.