She wants to figure out if Juliet is even interested in marriage.
They make fun of the nurse and when she says she needs to talk to Romeo mercutio wants to make fun of Romeo for it but benvoilo tries to prevent it.
In Act II, Scene 5, Juliet is impatient for the nurse to arrive to tell her what arrangements Romeo has made for their wedding. In Act III, Scene 2, Juliet is impatient for Romeo to arrive so they can lose their virginities. The Nurse is to bring the rope ladder for Romeo to climb up to Juliet's bedroom window, which is why, when the nurse arrives, she says: "What hast thou there? The cords that Romeo bid thee fetch?" But Juliet expresses no impatience for the rope ladder, only for Night to come and "bring me my Romeo."
she says that romeo is very nice man to marry her
The Nurse says it about Paris.
In act 2, scene 5; Juliet professes her love for Romeo. She has sent the nurse to see if romeo wants to marry her. while she waits, she gets aggitated about how slow the nurse is and how much she loves romeo. when finally the nurse does show up, Juliet wants to know everything. The nurse keeps asking for a breath to catch but Juliet keeps pondering her to tell her what romeo says. finally after some convinsing from Juliet the nurse tells her yes, romeo says yes. Juliet is excited and scared at the same time.
They make fun of the nurse and when she says she needs to talk to Romeo mercutio wants to make fun of Romeo for it but benvoilo tries to prevent it.
One line that illustrates Juliet's anger at the Nurse is when she says, "Blistered be thy tongue for such a wish!" This shows Juliet's frustration with the nurse's suggestion to marry Paris and blame Romeo. She also expresses her anger through statements like, "Prodigious birth of love it is to me, that I must love a loathed enemy."
It never says. It says it was such a long time a goo, they dont even remember
The nurse takes a long time to tell Juliet what Romeo says because she enjoys teasing and drawing out the information to make herself feel important. Additionally, the nurse may be trying to create tension or build suspense by delaying the message.
In Act II, Scene 5, Juliet is impatient for the nurse to arrive to tell her what arrangements Romeo has made for their wedding. In Act III, Scene 2, Juliet is impatient for Romeo to arrive so they can lose their virginities. The Nurse is to bring the rope ladder for Romeo to climb up to Juliet's bedroom window, which is why, when the nurse arrives, she says: "What hast thou there? The cords that Romeo bid thee fetch?" But Juliet expresses no impatience for the rope ladder, only for Night to come and "bring me my Romeo."
she says that romeo is very nice man to marry her
The Nurse says it about Paris.
In act 2, scene 5; Juliet professes her love for Romeo. She has sent the nurse to see if romeo wants to marry her. while she waits, she gets aggitated about how slow the nurse is and how much she loves romeo. when finally the nurse does show up, Juliet wants to know everything. The nurse keeps asking for a breath to catch but Juliet keeps pondering her to tell her what romeo says. finally after some convinsing from Juliet the nurse tells her yes, romeo says yes. Juliet is excited and scared at the same time.
The Nurse
Because he says that night can hide him and that the love he feels for juliets is so strong he can die in peace now that he knows juliet loves him back.
Balthazar says it to Romeo in act 5 scene 1. It is almost the same as Romeo's line which comes immediately before it: "For nothing can be ill if she be well."
the nurse says he’s better and romeo is good as dead