her reaction was angry
they are angry and try to make her feel ashamed about threatening them.
The Montages and the Capulets are enemy. That could be problematic.
Juliets relatives are the Capulets. In the book it talks of.... Lady Capulet, Capulet, Tybalt. Lady Capulet is Juliets Mother (She encourages Paris' and Juliets marriage) Capulet is Juliets father (The one who forces her to marry Paris) Tybalt is Juliets cousin. (He picks a fight with Mercutio and kills him. Romeo takes revenge for his friend and kills Tybalt. That is why Romeo is banished from Verona)
Very simply it is Tybalt who is Juliets cousin. He show's an explosive attitude throughout the whole play and is incredibly big headed and honorable towards the Capulets.
They are understandably devastated, both times she dies.
Lady Capulet thinks that she is spiraling into a deep depression and thinks that a marriage to handsome, young Paris will cheer her up.
The Montagues (Romeo's family) and the Capulets (Juliets family)
her reaction was at first she was okay with it until her and romeo got together and got married then she freaked out and she refused too
The discrimination in Romeo and Juliet is where Romeo is forbidden to marry Juliet or the Montagues (Romeo) to have anything to do with the Capulets (Juliet) because the Montagues do not have as much money as Juliets family and have a lower social standard.
The Montagues and the Capulets both pronounced as in English, not French. Why not more traditional names like Capone or Mastrangelo? they are two rival gangs in the Old Country, you know the Mafia.
The nurse never told the Capulets anything about Juliet's marriage to Romeo. There is a certain amount of self-interest in this; the nurse was Juliet's duenna, and part of her job was keeping strange men out of Juliet's bed. The Capulets would not be very happy with her if they found that she had actually conspired to get Juliet hooked up with a guy. She would be fired or worse.
Romeo and Juliet's families, the Montagues and the Capulets, are both wealthy and noble families in Verona. They share a similar social status and reputation in society, which is why their feud is so significant and impactful on the events of the play.