No idea. Tring to find out the same thing man. Sorry
the thron is emotionally distubred and likes to beat people to make himself feel better
Indeed. This is said by Mercutio, in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
Mercutio says this; If love be rough with you, be rough with love; Prick love for pricking, and you beat love down. He is responding to Romeo's line, "Is love a tender thing? It is too rough, too rude, too boistrous, and it pricks like thorn." He is saying essentially that if love is making your life difficult, don't give in to love. Of course all of this talk of pricks and beating love down is suggestive, perhaps suggesting a way of not giving in to love. "If love be rough with you, be rough with love. Fight prick for prick and you beat love down." - Mercutio, Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. Mercutio is saying to Romeo, if love is hard on you then fight it. And if you fight enough you will win. and be happy again. This is a loose translation.
Mercutio, a witty and sarcastic character in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet," is known for his clever wordplay and puns. Some examples of his jokes include his Queen Mab speech in Act 1, Scene 4, where he humorously describes the fairy queen's mischief-making abilities. Additionally, Mercutio often uses sexual innuendos and double entendres to mock Romeo's lovesickness, as seen in his banter with Romeo in Act 2, Scene 4. Overall, Mercutio's humor adds depth and complexity to the play's themes of love, fate, and tragedy.
telll her to suck a prick
A Beat Called Love was created in 1990.
Love on the Beat was created on 1984-10-02.
Houkago no Love Beat was created on 2004-06-10.
it will speed up because you are probably overwhelmed with nervousness or the very thought of them.
You should lay down the law but in a nice way but don't beat around the bush if they really love you they will make a compromise. DON'T BE SCARED!!!
Check out the Nurse in Act II Scene 4. Her most famous malapropism is "I desire some confidence with you." "Confidence" is a malapropism for "conference" but a surprisingly apt one since what the Nurse wishes to discuss is certainly confidential. She also says "I am so vexed that every part above me quivers" when she surely means "about me". And when she says "she hath the prettiest sententious of it", some have said that she really means "sentences". The modern English speaker has a tough time identifying malapropisms in our modern idiom (which is why they are ubiquitous), and it is even harder in Shakespeare where we cannot be exactly sure in some cases what word the idiom of the time might demand.
Because they love you