Once upon apon of time, there was a stupid person looking up this and everyone died.
The End
He is delighted to have his lively friend back.
In Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet there is a scene where Mercutio jokes to Romeo about love. In the scene, Romeo then joins in with Mercutio in the joking.
He makes fun of Romeo by sam
The Queen Mab Speech shows that Mercutio is imaginative, creative, quick-witted, and lively.
I have the most sympathy for Mercutio and Juliet. I feel bad for Mercutio because he died in a play fight [if you watch the movie]. it was an accident when Tybalt killed him. I also feel sympathy for Juliet because she faced all her fears about drinking mixture that Friar Lawrence gave to her. When she finally wakes up, Romeo, the man she did all that for, is lying dead next to her.
Mercutio is Romeo's best friend and he feels really bad about the fact that Romeo is worried about going to the Capulet party. Mercutio tells him that dreams aren't really worth worrying about (because Romeo had a dream about the party). He wants to calm Romeo down and make him feel better.
This is a line from Romeo and Juliet. Mercutio laughs because he can't understand Romeo's pain or "scars" from unrequited love. He doesn't understand how Romeo can feel emotional pain because Mercutio has never been in love. He can only relate to physical pain.This is a point of foreshadowing or dramatic ironyin the play because later in the story, Romeo laughs after Mercutio has been fatally wounded before he realizes that Mercutio is dying.
Mercutio is struggling with the reality of his own death. His first reaction is to be funny--to make a pun. But it is not funny at all. It is intensely sad and pathetic. In fact, his attempt to make light of his fatal wound make us feel even sorrier for him than we otherwise would. In the end, Mercutio feels anger at his impending death, and he directs that anger at Romeo and at all of the feuding Veronese ("both your houses"). We see Romeo redirecting that anger from himself to Tybalt. So, from pathos, the mood shifts abruptly to anger. then Romeo wants to kill Tybalt.
Mercutio hates everything Tybalt stands for.
It's a textbook kiss. "You kiss by the book" she says.
He doesn't. Tybalt kills Mercutio. It is not clear whether he meant to do it or not. He might have expected Mercutio to parry his thrust, and was surprised when he did not (because Romeo was holding him), or he may have taken advantage of Romeo's intervention to polish him off.
The Queen Mab Speech shows that Mercutio is imaginative, creative, quick-witted, and lively.
I have the most sympathy for Mercutio and Juliet. I feel bad for Mercutio because he died in a play fight [if you watch the movie]. it was an accident when Tybalt killed him. I also feel sympathy for Juliet because she faced all her fears about drinking mixture that Friar Lawrence gave to her. When she finally wakes up, Romeo, the man she did all that for, is lying dead next to her.
Mercutio is Romeo's best friend and he feels really bad about the fact that Romeo is worried about going to the Capulet party. Mercutio tells him that dreams aren't really worth worrying about (because Romeo had a dream about the party). He wants to calm Romeo down and make him feel better.
When my sister insults me, I like glowering at her to make her feel bad. (Kind of like glare but more moody)
The splenetic comments from the boss made the team feel demoralized.
Insults can sometimes indicate that a person is interested in you ... but that's not a mature sort of interest and it's more likely that they're trying to be mean. You should let them know your feelings with an "I" message like "I feel _____ when someone insults me like that." If he's really interested in you as a friend, he'll apologize and try talking to you like a normal person.
this isn't nice to make fun of people, it hurt feelings, and it make person feel sad. no insults this called cyberbulling sticks and stones may brake your bones but word may never hurt,as long as u kno the words are not true
Mercutio says this as a witty play on words, implying that he will be in his grave tomorrow due to his impending death. It also serves as a dark foreshadowing of his fate in the play, where he is fatally wounded.
Curley's wife threatens Crooks with false accusations and insults him, asserting her perceived superiority as a white woman against a Black man. She belittles him and makes him feel small and afraid in his own space.