Cosmic irony
By asking the nurse.
He is richer than Juliet...
he wants to be free
Juliet asks for the identity of two other guys before she asks about Romeo to disguise the fact that it is romeo that she is really interested in.
The Nurse thinks Paris is handsome. When the Nurse suggests that Juliet should forget about Romeo and marry Paris, she loses Juliet's trust and confidence
Juliet's Nurse tells both Romeo and Juliet who the other's identity was.
The Nurse
I don't know whose Romeo and Juliet you are talking about, but that does not happen in the play of that name by Shakespeare. In Shakespeare's play, Juliet does not reveal her identity to Romeo. It is the nurse who tells him who she is. And he is not angry, only perplexed.
By asking the nurse.
In act 3.3 of Romeo and Juliet, the golden axe metaphor suggests that Romeo sees himself as capable of achieving great feats but feels that his love for Juliet has weakened him. This metaphor highlights his internal conflict between his personal desires and the societal expectations that constrain him. It also shows how Romeo's love for Juliet has transformed him and made him question his own identity and values.
Juliet asks the Nurse to find out Romeo's identity at the Capulet ball, as she has fallen in love with him and wants to know who he is.
He is richer than Juliet...
he wants to be free
Juliet's Nurse tells Romeo that Juliet is a Capulet, while Romeo's friend Benvolio reveals to Juliet that Romeo is a Montague.
romeo. she likes to impersonate guys. she has identity issues
The Nurse reveals the truth about Romeo's identity to Juliet in Act I, Scene V of "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare. She tells Juliet that Romeo is a Montague, the son of their family's sworn enemy. This revelation sets the stage for the tragedy that unfolds as the young lovers continue their forbidden romance.
Juliet asks for the identity of two other guys before she asks about Romeo to disguise the fact that it is romeo that she is really interested in.