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This phrase is not used in Romeo and Juliet.
yes
Juliet Capulet is her real name.
onomatopoeia
If you mean the line "the sun for sorrow will not show his head", it's a personification.
act 3 scene 2 line 45
This phrase is not used in Romeo and Juliet.
yes
Juliet Capulet is her real name.
onomatopoeia
If you mean the line "the sun for sorrow will not show his head", it's a personification.
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.
The most known line in Romeo anf Juliet by William Shakespeare is: "Romeo, Romeo, where for art thou Romeo." The second most known line is: "For what's in a name, for a rose upon any other name would smell as sweet. So Romeo would if not Romeo called."
Vietnames
Yes
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.