They get angry, and Murellus makes a winded speech about why Caesar is not that great. He talks about how just recently the public climbed to walls and towers to see Pompey. Flavius and Murellus are both supporters of Pompey.
They get mad!
Oh, they love it. Caesar was a great crowd pleaser. You can see that from the attitude of the workingmen in the first scene and the way Antony is able to appeal to the crowd's inherent liking for Caesar.
It can be either one, depending on your meaning. You would "respond to" a question or comment directed at you. You would "respond for" someone else who cannot respond for themselves.
An exchange follows in which the commoners joke and respond with considerable wit. Marullus is in no mood for their banter; both he and Flavius are jealous of Caesar's popularity and sympathetic to Pompey's causes. Marullus reminds the commoners that not too long ago they gathered in the streets to celebrate Pompey as their leader. He now orders them to return to their homes and repent of their disloyalty.
No, volcanoes do not respond.
respond
I have worked with my mentor and responded to the customer
Cones respond to color .
we can respond by thanking them ..
The word respond is a verb. It means to answer or to reply.
The past tense of respond is responded.
Both "I will response to you" and "I will respond to you" are correct, but "I will respond to you" is more commonly used in English. "Response" can be a noun or a verb, while "respond" is strictly a verb.