The only plan Juliet's parents make for her in the play is for Juliet to marry Paris.
There is no scene 5 in act 5, and anyway Juliet was far too dead by the end of act 5 to plan anything.
The plans that Juliet's parents have made for her is to marry Lord Paris. This is in scene 4 of act 3, and it is mostly Juliet's father that makes the plan, although her mother goes along with it.
Romeo says Juliet's love has made him effiminate. "O sweet Juliet, Thy beauty hath made me effeminate And in my temper soften'd valour's steel!"
In a well-made play, the obligatory scene is the scene:
They made Hecate angry by not letting her participate in their plans. -Macbeth.
In Act II, Scene 5, Juliet is impatient for the nurse to arrive to tell her what arrangements Romeo has made for their wedding. In Act III, Scene 2, Juliet is impatient for Romeo to arrive so they can lose their virginities. The Nurse is to bring the rope ladder for Romeo to climb up to Juliet's bedroom window, which is why, when the nurse arrives, she says: "What hast thou there? The cords that Romeo bid thee fetch?" But Juliet expresses no impatience for the rope ladder, only for Night to come and "bring me my Romeo."
The plans that Juliet's parents have made for her is to marry Lord Paris. This is in scene 4 of act 3, and it is mostly Juliet's father that makes the plan, although her mother goes along with it.
They have arranged a nice marriage with a relative of the Prince.
Romeo says Juliet's love has made him effiminate. "O sweet Juliet, Thy beauty hath made me effeminate And in my temper soften'd valour's steel!"
It means that fear that love was the cause Romeo and Juliets death made the parents feel even more angry at themselves for causing their children to hide their love maybe even be the cause of their death's
In a well-made play, the obligatory scene is the scene:
In a well-made play, the obligatory scene is the scene:
he made a scene in public
if you mean the plans for 'Germania', then very little. if you mean about the Holocaust, then the plans that were made were not made very far in advance and they weren't made by Hitler.
The police arrived on the scene minutes after the 911 call was made.
They made Hecate angry by not letting her participate in their plans. -Macbeth.
In Act II, Scene 5, Juliet is impatient for the nurse to arrive to tell her what arrangements Romeo has made for their wedding. In Act III, Scene 2, Juliet is impatient for Romeo to arrive so they can lose their virginities. The Nurse is to bring the rope ladder for Romeo to climb up to Juliet's bedroom window, which is why, when the nurse arrives, she says: "What hast thou there? The cords that Romeo bid thee fetch?" But Juliet expresses no impatience for the rope ladder, only for Night to come and "bring me my Romeo."
i need a essay by Thursday 3rd April the brief isthe brief is describe the dramatic effect of act 3 scene 1 from romeo and Julietin the essay play there are 8 secctions1 introductionwho wrote the play ? when ?whats the play about? main characters?key themes?summarise events in act 3 scene 1impact effect on audience2 opening of act 3 scene 1how does the scene begin (from start to tybalts arrival)what do we learn about benvolio and mercutio?what does the conversation show about the atmosphere in Verona?what has happened before this scene and how does this provide a contrast?3 Tybaltwhat sort of character is Tybalt ?how can we tell?why is he angry at romeo?what do we know about him already (eg the first scene)4 the fighthow does Tybalt insult romeo (and anger mercutio)why does romeo refuse to fight himwhy does mercutio end up fighting insteadhow is this scene made dramatic for the audience5 mercutios deathhow is mercutio actually killed and why is this importantwhat does he say as he is dyinghow dramatic is this section for the audience6 tybalts deathwhat does romeo decide after mercutio is killedhow is this part made dramaticwhat implactions do romeos actions have on the rest of the play7 the princes punishmenthow do romeo and juliets parents react to the newswhat does this show us about themwhat does the prince decide and how will this effect romeo and Juliet8 conclutionwhat impact does this scene have on youhow does it linkk to the tragedy at the end of the play