GO F**K YOUR MUM. Joking, answer is " "My life were better ended by their hate,Than death prorogued, wanting of thy love." His life WILL be ended by their hate
Yes. Yes there is
Dramatic irony is used in the prologue of Romeo and Juliet presents facts to the audience that will be unknown the characters in the play. It is a means of creatingsuspense making the audience member anxious or excited about the upcoming plot.
It's ironic that when Mercutio teases Romeo about being in love with Rosaline, Romeo is really in love with Juliet. It's ironic that the Friar advises Romeo to "love moderately" as he is about to perform the very sudden marriage between the passionate young people. Friar Laurence points out an irony as he gathers herbs: used correctly, poisonous herbs can cure disease, and vice-versa. This irony is mirrored in the play as whole, in which an good thing, the love of Romeo and Juliet, leads to their deaths, and a bad thing, the deaths of Romeo and Juliet, leads to a good thing, the end of the feud between the families.
This phrase is not used in Romeo and Juliet.
The ironic part is that Juliet drank a potion to make it look like she was dead. While Romeo drank a poison to actually kill himself, both poisons and potions come from plants which is what friar Laurence was explaining in act 1.
yes
All, except dramatic, situational, and verbal.
Dramatic irony is used in the prologue of Romeo and Juliet presents facts to the audience that will be unknown the characters in the play. It is a means of creatingsuspense making the audience member anxious or excited about the upcoming plot.
It's ironic that when Mercutio teases Romeo about being in love with Rosaline, Romeo is really in love with Juliet. It's ironic that the Friar advises Romeo to "love moderately" as he is about to perform the very sudden marriage between the passionate young people. Friar Laurence points out an irony as he gathers herbs: used correctly, poisonous herbs can cure disease, and vice-versa. This irony is mirrored in the play as whole, in which an good thing, the love of Romeo and Juliet, leads to their deaths, and a bad thing, the deaths of Romeo and Juliet, leads to a good thing, the end of the feud between the families.
This phrase is not used in Romeo and Juliet.
The ironic part is that Juliet drank a potion to make it look like she was dead. While Romeo drank a poison to actually kill himself, both poisons and potions come from plants which is what friar Laurence was explaining in act 1.
yes
Juliet Capulet is her real name.
onomatopoeia
Juliet had a flashback of all the things she did with Romeo, just before she was about to shoot herself.
Yes, Shakespeare uses several asides in Romeo & Juliet. Reade the play to see specifically when and where.
Juliet starts out speaking in what she thinks is a soliloquy except that unknown to her Romeo is listening in. This enables Romeo to find out why Juliet really thinks about him without the usual doubletalk.
"Passionate Pilgrim" - a euphemism used to refer to a lover in Romeo and Juliet. "Star-crossed lovers" - a euphemism for describing Romeo and Juliet's doomed fate due to the alignment of the stars.