When characters make use of oxymorons, they are using a rhetorical or literary device, like a metaphor or simile. They are doing this to get their point across better. Whether they "overuse" them or not is a matter of taste, but if a lot of people think that the use of oxymorons was excessive, then they are not succeeding at getting their point across better. If in the listener's mind the literary devices get in the way of the point that is being made, it often shows that the speaker is more interested in showing off his cleverness than saying anything of value.
Romeo in Act 1 Scene 1 goes on and on about Rosaline using a whole bunch of oxymorons. Shakespeare is satirizing the artificial conventions of flirting which Romeo is following.
Romeo and Juliet
"Parting is such sweet sorrow"
romeo and Paris / rosaline and Juliet
Romeo mercutio tybalt Juliet
Generally (but not always!) Shakespeare's characters who spoke in blank verse are the lower-status characters. Think of which characters are not as important, then compare that to some of their speech in Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo and Juliet
romeo and Juliet
"Parting is such sweet sorrow"
romeo and Paris / rosaline and Juliet
Romeo mercutio tybalt Juliet
Benvolio and Mercutio are the two comical characters in Romeo and Juliet
The oxymoron "honorable villain" is found in Act 3, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet when Friar Laurence refers to Romeo as such. This description highlights the complex nature of Romeo's character, as he is seen as both noble and capable of committing acts of violence.
Most of them also have the title "Romeo and Juliet".
In the 1996 modernized version of Romeo and Juliet, three main characters die: Romeo, Juliet, and Mercutio.
Romeo. The other one is Juliet, as if you didn't know.
Juliet calling Romeo a "devilish angel" is an example of an oxymoron, which is a figure of speech that combines contradictory terms. In this case, Juliet is highlighting Romeo's conflicting qualities of being both alluring ("angel") and troublesome ("devilish").
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