well only if you like it like
that you can but be ready four those lipes
who is this? yo mama
FRIAR LAWRENCE agrees to marry the couple because he wanted to stop the enemity between the Montagues and the Carpulet.sittng down he realised that marrying the cuple could bring about the uniting of these families which was real though tragic.
Yes. There is Friar Lawrence and Friar John in Romeo and Juliet, and Friar Peter, Friar Thomas and Friar Francis in Measure for Measure, in which the Duke disguises himself as a monk. There is a Friar Patrick mentioned in the Two Gentlemen of Verona, who fulfils the same function as Friar Lawrence in Romeo and Juliet, although we do not see him. You may object that technically a friar is not the same thing as a monk, but it is not clear whether Shakespeare was clear on the difference. In any case, King John is clearly stated to have been poisoned "by a monk" and not by a friar. The word "monk" occurs most frequently in his very late play Henry VIII.
Romeo asks friar Laurence to marry him and Juliet in secret
Friar john and friar laurance are the witnesses and they marry they
Friar Lawrence. He pretty well had to, since he expected the Friar to perform the ceremony.
Friar
Martin Luther was in fact a friar, not a monk.He was a friar beginning in 1505, when he made a promise to St. Anne - if he saved him from the thunderstorm, he would become a friar.
friar
FRIAR LAWRENCE agrees to marry the couple because he wanted to stop the enemity between the Montagues and the Carpulet.sittng down he realised that marrying the cuple could bring about the uniting of these families which was real though tragic.
FRIAR LAWRENCE agrees to marry the couple because he wanted to stop the enemity between the Montagues and the Carpulet.sittng down he realised that marrying the cuple could bring about the uniting of these families which was real though tragic.
yes and no he was a monk
Yes. There is Friar Lawrence and Friar John in Romeo and Juliet, and Friar Peter, Friar Thomas and Friar Francis in Measure for Measure, in which the Duke disguises himself as a monk. There is a Friar Patrick mentioned in the Two Gentlemen of Verona, who fulfils the same function as Friar Lawrence in Romeo and Juliet, although we do not see him. You may object that technically a friar is not the same thing as a monk, but it is not clear whether Shakespeare was clear on the difference. In any case, King John is clearly stated to have been poisoned "by a monk" and not by a friar. The word "monk" occurs most frequently in his very late play Henry VIII.
Friar Laurence agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet in hopes that the marriage will help bring peace between their feuding families, the Montagues and Capulets. He sees it as a way to reconcile the two families and end the ongoing conflict.
sunk monk
He wasn't a Monk, he was a Friar. Friar Tuck was his name. A monk is a member of a monastic order. A friar is a member of a mendicant order. Monks live in a monastery. Friars live in a friary. Monks are usually cloistered. Friars are usually active.
Roman Catholic answerNo St. Francis of Assisi was a friar, not a monk.
No, for a while he was an Augustinian Friar, not a monk.