Romeo disobeys his family and the capults
Balthsar disobeys Romeo by not listening to Romeo's orders in Act III scene 3 when Romeo tells Balthasar to leave him alone in Capulet's vault but instead spys on Romeo to see what he is doing in the enemy's vault .
Juliet: "Romeo, Romeo, Wherefore art thou Romeo?"
He is dead and buried with his true love >.<
She means "Where are you, Romeo?"
No, your quotation is wrong. The correct quotation is "Romeo, Romeo wherefore art thou Romeo?" The word "wherefore" does not mean "where", it means "why", so the quotation means "Romeo, Romeo! Why are you Romeo?" Juliet is asking why she had to fall in love with Romeo, the son of Montague, since she is supposed to hate all Montagues.
seeing eachother
Balthsar disobeys Romeo by not listening to Romeo's orders in Act III scene 3 when Romeo tells Balthasar to leave him alone in Capulet's vault but instead spys on Romeo to see what he is doing in the enemy's vault .
the "dis" in disobey is the prefix. Disobey itself is not a prefix.
She chose to disobey her teacher's instructions and faced the consequences.
Because the apothecary said that he would sell the poison to Romeo only because he needed the money so badly (selling poison is illegal in Mantua). Therefore, the apothecary's poverty (state/situation) is forcing him to take Romeo's offer, not because he wants to disobey the law. Romeo is paying the apothecary's need, not his want.
The word 'disobey' is a verb meaning to refuse or fail to follow an order or rule.The verb 'disobey' is an action of the subject of the sentence.Examples:He continues to disobey the playground rules.A dog should not disobey its owner.I will not disobey the king.
Disobey is already a verb. This is because the word disobey portrays an action.Other verbs are disobeys, disobeying and disobeyed."I will disobey the order"."The citizens are disobeying"."The servant disobeyed and quit".
It's not okay to disrespect or disobey.
Disobey is stressed on the third syllable.
There are three syllables in the word 'disobey'.
They were trained to never disobey an order.
Mutiny and disobey have similar meanings, but are not synonyms.