Mercutio is woried because Tybalt is an excellent fighter
Mercutio is Romeo's best friend and he feels really bad about the fact that Romeo is worried about going to the Capulet party. Mercutio tells him that dreams aren't really worth worrying about (because Romeo had a dream about the party). He wants to calm Romeo down and make him feel better.
He is a prankster, or a guy that makes jokes all the time. He says them in a pun.
"He is worried that romeo actually wants to marry a Capulet" said someone. Not true--he knew Romeo was after Rosaline and she was a Capulet. What the friar actually says, "Therefore thy earliness doth me assure thou art uprised with some distemperature." means that he suspects that Romeo is worried or upset about something and so didn't sleep well.
Portia, Brutus's wife, is worried about Brutus because he is hiding a secret from her.
fret
He despises Tybalt, but is worried that he may be able to draw Romeo into a fight and hurt or even kill him, as Tybalt spends his time studying fencing.
Mercutio is Romeo's best friend and he feels really bad about the fact that Romeo is worried about going to the Capulet party. Mercutio tells him that dreams aren't really worth worrying about (because Romeo had a dream about the party). He wants to calm Romeo down and make him feel better.
He is challenging Romeo to a duel. As Mercutio says, "A challenge, on my life."
They worried a strong national government could eventually challenge the right to own slaves and might impose higher tariffs.
Friar Laurence expresses fears about the consequences of rushing Romeo and Juliet's marriage, the potential conflicts that could arise between the Capulets and Montagues, and the fleeting nature of young love. He is worried that their hasty decision could lead to tragedy.
He is a prankster, or a guy that makes jokes all the time. He says them in a pun.
Worried is past tense. The present tense is worry.
more worried, most worried
'He was a worried boy.' In this sentence worried is describing the boy, therefore worried is an adjective.
I'm so worried. Is worried an adjective or a verb?
The verb is "are" (as it is in, "You are worried.")
I suppose you could say "A worried lot" if you mean lot as the noun, and a group of people are all worried, but I would say "The whole group is worried" instead. If you mean that you are worried often, you would say "I get worried a lot" and if you mean that you are extremely worried, then you would say "I am a lot worried" or "I am very worried" which sounds a little better.