The Nurse was prepared to consider Juliet to be married to Romeo when it meant arranging for Juliet to lose her virginity, but when the marriage became inconvenient, suddenly the Nurse decides that it wasn't a real marriage.
"Well, thou hast comforted me marvelous much." This line, from the last scene of Act III is a great example of irony. Juliet is not at all comforted by the Nurse's advice to become a bigamist despite what she says. She perceives the Nurse to be an enemy, an ally of her father, and not to be trusted. She does not want the Nurse to blab to her parents. Instead she wants to get some advice from a more trustworthy counsellor. Hence she tells the further lie, "Tell my lady I am gone, having displeased my father, to Laurence's cell to make confession and to be absolved." Her parents cannot object to her visit to the priest on this pretext.
Because the nurse let Juliet marry Romeo and now she wants Juliet to marry Paris.
The Nurse. :)
They both learn their respective identities from the nurse: Romeo first, then Juliet.
Juliet's nurse.
The Nurse and Friar Lawrence knew about it before anyone else because the Friar performed the marriage and the Nurse was Juliet's close confidant so she told her everything.
Lady Capulet is Juliets mother BUT the nurse brought Juliet up. Juliet was raised in Italy in the house of Lord and Lady Capulet, her parents. But largely by her Nurse and servant Angelica.
Pigs
The Nurse. :)
They both learn their respective identities from the nurse: Romeo first, then Juliet.
Juliet's nurse.
because the nurse is big fat and ugly and has no friends and orderes juliet around that is why she is angry at the nurse
Yes, the nurse did have a friendship with Juliet as she knew everything about Romeo and Juliet. And she would tell Juliet when her mom is coming when Juliet was doing something she wasn't supposed to do. So yes the nurse was friends with Juliet.
The Nurse and Friar Lawrence knew about it before anyone else because the Friar performed the marriage and the Nurse was Juliet's close confidant so she told her everything.
the nurse in the story is her best friend because the nurse has taken care of her since she was a young girl and she tells and gives Juliet advice and is always on the side of Juliet. Juliet has only her nurse to talk to of her problems and the nurse is more of a mother to her
Lady Capulet is Juliets mother BUT the nurse brought Juliet up. Juliet was raised in Italy in the house of Lord and Lady Capulet, her parents. But largely by her Nurse and servant Angelica.
No, the nurse does not die in the Romeo and Juliet Play.
the nurse
Nurse loves Juliet because she has cared for her since she was born. Nurse was like a mother to Juliet, and Nurse's own daughter died, so she replaced her deceased daughter with Juliet, since they were the same age.