A couplet is a pair of rhyming lines like "Compare her face to some that I shall show/ And I will make thee think thy swan a crow."
Romeo and Juliet themselves are a couple, not a couplet.
monologue
They don't use the term, but they do use the device. Mercutio is a foil to Romeo in 1,4 and Benvolio is a foil to Mercutio in 3,1.
The chourus describes Romeo and Juliet as star crossed lovers.
soliloquy
Friar Lawrence. It's part of the long-term plan he unfolds to Romeo after Romeo is banished.
monologue
This would be a direct metaphor because of the use of "is"
They don't use the term, but they do use the device. Mercutio is a foil to Romeo in 1,4 and Benvolio is a foil to Mercutio in 3,1.
Bright angel is a term of endearment that Romeo uses to describe Juliet in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." It reflects the intense and pure love that Romeo feels for Juliet. This term signifies Juliet's beauty and heavenly qualities in Romeo's eyes.
"Romeo and Juliet" was written in the form of a play, specifically a Shakespearean tragedy.
The literary term is metaphor, specifically a metaphor where Juliet is being compared to the sun. Metaphors involve describing one thing in terms of another to create vivid imagery and deepen meaning in a text. In this case, Shakespeare uses the metaphor "Juliet is the sun" to emphasize Juliet's beauty and importance in Romeo's eyes.
Juliet's speech is an example of a soliloquy, which is a literary device where a character speaks their thoughts aloud to themselves, revealing their innermost feelings and emotions to the audience. In this case, Juliet is expressing her conflicted emotions about her love for Romeo and the feud between their families.
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").
Iambic Pentameter.
Blank verse
The chourus describes Romeo and Juliet as star crossed lovers.
soliloquy