the answer is 'zounds'
Tybalt killed Mercutio. First Tybalt was insulting Mercutio, Mercutio got furious and Tybalt and Mercutio took out their swords and began to fight. Romeo tried to break the fight up but instead blocks Mercutio from getting Tybalt, while Tybalt was able to stab Mercutio right in the gut.
Tybalt challenges Romeo to a sword fight, which Romeo declines, but Mercutio accepts in Romeo's place. Tybalt wounds Mercutio when Romeo attempts to break up their fight. Mercutio dies and, in a rage, Romeo kills Tybalt. This results in the Prince banishing Romeo for life, only hours after his secret marriage to Juliet.
No he did not. Mercutio answers Tybalt's challenge to Romeo. They begin having a sword fight. Then Tybalt attempts to stab Romeo but his sword goes under Romeo's arm and fatally wounds Mercutio. Another Answer: There is no direct indication of Tybalts intentions in the script. It simply reads, "Tybalt under Romeo's arm thrusts Mercutio in." So, whether Tybalt intended to stab Romeo or Mercutio is up for interpretation. Some directors stage Tybalt's thrust as an accident resulting from harmless swordplay.
Capulet gives us the best example: "God's bread!" Or, in other words the host of the sacrament, a pretty strong expletive. Elizabethan cursing was generally religious in nature, and a lot of them start with the word "God's". Sometimes the god bit got left off leaving only the "S" so that "God's blood" became "sblood" and "God's wounds" became "swounds" or even "zounds". Capulet also uses the expression "God-i-godden" (not very strong, sort of like saying "Hello!?"), and Mercutio uses "Zounds".
The origin is "By God's wounds" meaning Christ's stigmata (wounds from being crucified), shortened to "His wounds" and shortened still to 's wounds, shortened again to zounds. It's an exclamation; today you might say "Gadzooks" or "Jesus Christ!" or "Holy smokes." Or if you were saying it more straightforwardly, it might mean also "I swear" as in "believe me" as in "I swear on this bible" or "I swear on my mothers grave" or "I swear on God's wounds" or something similarly sacred. Now don't ask me where "Gadzooks" comes from. (Actually, it's from "God's hooks", the nails which fastened Jesus to the cross)
The mild oath to express anger used by Mercutio is "zounds," which is a minced oath for "God's wounds." It was a common expletive in Shakespearean times, used as an expression of frustration or anger.
In the play "Romeo and Juliet," Mercutio is killed by Tybalt in a sword fight. Tybalt, seeking revenge, challenges Romeo to a duel. Mercutio steps in to defend Romeo, but Tybalt fatally wounds him under Romeo's arm.
Tybalt killed Mercutio. First Tybalt was insulting Mercutio, Mercutio got furious and Tybalt and Mercutio took out their swords and began to fight. Romeo tried to break the fight up but instead blocks Mercutio from getting Tybalt, while Tybalt was able to stab Mercutio right in the gut.
Tybalt challenges Romeo to a sword fight, which Romeo declines, but Mercutio accepts in Romeo's place. Tybalt wounds Mercutio when Romeo attempts to break up their fight. Mercutio dies and, in a rage, Romeo kills Tybalt. This results in the Prince banishing Romeo for life, only hours after his secret marriage to Juliet.
Romeo is expressing that he is unaffected by physical wounds but deeply disturbed by emotional pain. He is suggesting that emotional wounds, such as love and heartbreak, can leave scars that are more lasting and punishing than physical injuries.
Yes there were wounds. He was pierced by the side.
From These Wounds was created in 2004.
Most likey bullet wounds
They are deep, narrow wounds
Missile wounds
The duration of The Wounds is 1.72 hours.
He nursed his wounds.