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This is called a sash. It usually identifies where the contestant is from.

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10y ago

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How would you describe Romeo from Romeo and Juliet?

A very romantic, quiet young boy who loves the ladys. in Shakespeare's plays he is postponed as an extremely cute chap, in the film he is played by Leonardo De Caprio who says it all for some.


How big is Zach Mann's Wang?

well you already know it is the biggest in the world and you cant measure is because its to big to measure. it can rap around the earth 82,266,213,623,777,242,982 times it is HUGE! but there is 1 kid who as the same size and his name is Bryley Roper their dad is Steve Nash so ya but Zach Mann's wang is enormous and he has friends Cole, TK, T-Bone, Sawyer, Porter, Kaleb, Jacob, and Josh who have a 15 inch wang so come on ladys we are beasts and you need to meet up with us. WE ARE MANNaMALs! Well actually it is tiny Tk's is the biggest then sawyer then porter and so on but ya its Tiny as crap Hey im just kidding Zach so u have second biggest behind me TK they are equal in size and k-pup you are hot


Who convinces Romeo to go to the Capulets party to meet new young ladys?

Benvolio


What was the city of London like in the time of shakespeare?

The London of William Shakespeare's time was quite smaller than it is today,measuring just about one square mile.The streets were very narrow,cobbled,and slippery with the slime caused by refuse.Houses were crammed together,and there were a lot of furtive alleys and lanes.Chamber pots,or jordans,were emptied out of windows,as in those days there was no drainage.The city stank so bad that it would make a man throw up his gorge.But the city had plenty of natural cleaners-the kites,graceful birds that made their nests of rags and refuse in the forks of the trees.They scavenged,eating anything with relish...And counteracting the bad smells,the smells of the countryside floated in.There were rosy milkmaids in the early morning streets,and sellers of fesh cresses.It was a city of loud noises-horses and coach wheels on the cobblestones,the yells of traders,the brawling of apprentices,and scuffles when the many inns turned-out the drunkards.Even normal conversation must of been loud since everybody was,by our standards,tipsy.Nobody drank water,and tea had not yet come in.Ale was the standard tipple,and it was strong.Ale for breakfast was a good means of starting the day in euphoria or truculence.Ale for dinner refocillated the wasted tissues of the morning.Ale for supper ensured a heavy snoring repose-which just added to the noise.The better sort drank wine,which prompted good fellowship and led to sword fights.It definitely was not,what we call "a sober city".Along the banks of the river Thames there would often be criminals,chained to the walls at low tide,who had to abide the "the washing of the three tides".The river had to look on other emblems of the brutality of the age-the severed heads on Temple Bar and on London Bridge itself,there displayed for all to see.