"Beautiful-tyrant, fiend angelical"
oxymoron
"Well, Wednesday is too soon. A Thursday let it"
Capulet
What does the lark represent?
the morning
killed by Romeo in Act III
Tybalt
Nurse's advice to Juliet at the end of Act III
marry Paris
"Nights candles are burnt out"
metaphor
"Tybalt would kill thee, but thou slew'st Tybalt...The law that threatened death becomes thy friend and turns it to exile"
Friar Lawrence
Who is the first character to die in this Act?
Mercutio?
brings Juliet the news that she is to marry Paris
Lady Capulet
Lady Capulet's reaction to Benvolio's account of the murders
she thought he was lying
"Flies may do this, but I from this must fly"
pun
"..or I will drag thee on a hurdle thither. Out, you green-sickness carrion!"
Capulet
What does Juliet plan to do if the Friar does not have a better plan for her in scene v?
take her own life
announces Romeo's sentence
Prince Escalus
Why does Juliet want Fortune to be fickle?
So Romeo's fate can be changed and he can return to Verona
"O, I am Fortune's fool!"
allusion
"A plague o'both your houses!"
Mercutio
Where is Romeo banished to?
Mantua
does not want to fight Tybalt
Romeo
"It was the nightingale and not the lark that pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear"
Juliet
"Come, night, come, Romeo, come, thou day in night;"
apostrophe
"O serpent heart, hid with a flowering face. Did ever dragon keep so fair a cave?"
Juliet
Where does Juliet tell the Nurse she is going to go at the end of Scene V and what will she do there?
Go to confession/Friar Lawrence
will send a messenger to Romeo with news from Verona
Friar Lawrence
the Capulets think Juliet is crying because:
This is an example of:
Tybalt's death
Dramatic irony