Want this question answered?
fair Juliet says it, she says it, julie'st
In Act II prologue, 'old desire' is Romeo's former love, Rosaline, and 'young affection' is his new love Juliet. He quickly forgets Rosaline in the face of Juliet's beauty.
The chorus, at the beginning of Act II.
Check out the Nurse in Act II Scene 4. Her most famous malapropism is "I desire some confidence with you." "Confidence" is a malapropism for "conference" but a surprisingly apt one since what the Nurse wishes to discuss is certainly confidential. She also says "I am so vexed that every part above me quivers" when she surely means "about me". And when she says "she hath the prettiest sententious of it", some have said that she really means "sentences". The modern English speaker has a tough time identifying malapropisms in our modern idiom (which is why they are ubiquitous), and it is even harder in Shakespeare where we cannot be exactly sure in some cases what word the idiom of the time might demand.
In Act 2 Scene 3 the Porter says "knock" 10 times.
From a fellow high school student, Titania.
The lines "Out of this wood do not desire to go, Thou shalt remain here whether thou wilt or no, You are a spirit of no common rate" are spoken by Puck to Bottom in Act 3 of Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Puck is trying to keep Bottom in the enchanted forest and recognizing his uniqueness as a transformed character.
TITANIA
a. titania
At the beginning of Act IV Bottom is lying in the arms of a gorgeous woman who is treating him like a king, giving him servants and anything he wants. If this be possession, he wants more of it. It is true that Titania has said "Out of this forest do not desire to go" and she has the power to enforce it, but she does not want to own Bottom, just to make love to him. And Bottom does not seem to be objecting at all.
The Age Discrimination Act <><><> The ADEA= Age Discrimination in Employment Act. It is not unconstitutional- it IS illegal. See the link at the bottom of the page.
Knowledge and desire
No, there is no wood in a catalytic converter.
This is a simple question. Your husband has no desire for you because he is clearly sleeping with someone else.
If the toothpick is made of wood or plastic, it would act as an insulator.
These lines are spoken by Juliet in Act 2, Scene 2 of "Romeo and Juliet." Juliet is expressing her love for Romeo and her desire for him to stay with her even though she knows it is dangerous for them to be together.
Romeo says this line in Act 2, Scene 2 of "Romeo and Juliet" as he talks about how the darkness of the night will help him conceal his presence from anyone who may be watching. He is addressing Juliet and expressing his desire to be with her despite the dangers posed by their families' feud.