Juliet says in Act 3 Scene 5:
"O fortune, fortune! all men call thee fickle:
If thou art fickle, what dost thou with him.
That is renown'd for faith? Be fickle, fortune;
For then, I hope, thou wilt not keep him long,
But send him back."
Fickle meant the same then as it does now--changing and uncertain.
This word does not appear in Romeo and Juliet.
That word does not appear in the text of Romeo and Juliet. Please provide the text where you believe it to appear.
There is no word "jaiden" anywhere in Romeo and Juliet.
the song that dawn sings in romeo and juliet, so the word is dawn song!
Nobody. Shakespeare never used the word "sweater".
This word does not appear in Romeo and Juliet.
That word does not appear in the text of Romeo and Juliet. Please provide the text where you believe it to appear.
There is no word "jaiden" anywhere in Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo And Juliet
the song that dawn sings in romeo and juliet, so the word is dawn song!
That word does not appear in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Maybe it is in some other one.
Nobody. Shakespeare never used the word "sweater".
Juliet is the one who brings up the subject of marriage and asks Romeo to "send word tomorrow".
"Hatred" (used in Act II Scene 3)
maidenhead
'Throw your mistempered weapons to the ground' - weapons made for a bad purpose.
Shakespeare did use the word "confuse" but he liked the word "confound" better. Friar Lawrence uses it when Romeo and Juliet meet to be married.