Which character is aggressive and unstable but really cares and loves their daughter, having her best interest in mind?
Who is Capulet?
What type of figurative language is being used in:
“The wind howled in the night.”
What is personification?
Which theme does NOT appear in the story?
Love
Hate
Greed
Loss
What is Greed?
What can you infer about the person says:
“This by his voice should be a Montague.-...Now, by the stock and honor of my kin to strike him dead, I hold it not a sin”
as well as
"What, drawn and talk of peace? I hate the word/ As I hate hell, all Montagues, and thee” (1.1.71-72).
What is aggressive and violent? Tybalt, the speaker, is showing how quick to anger he is and how he would easily kill a Montague.
Where did Juliet first meet Romeo?
What is at a Capulet's party?
Which character is known for his peace-loving nature and genial concern for others?
Who is Benvolio?
What type of figurative language is shown in the line:
"limping winter treads" and why do you say that?
What is personification? It gives a human quality, limping, to winter, an abstract concept that cannot limp.
What is the significance of the lines:
“‘Tis torture and not mercy. Heaven is here,
Where Juliet lives, and every cat and dog
And little mouse, every unworthy thing,
Live here in heaven and may look on her,
But Romeo may not."
What is the correct MLA format for Romeo and Juliet?
(Book name. Scene. Act. Line).
(Book name, Scene, Act, Line)
(Book name. Act. Scene. Line).
(Book name, Act, Scene, Line)
What is (Book name. Act. Scene. Line).
How many lines does a sonnet have and how many syllables would it have in a line if it was in iambic pentameter?
What is 14 lines and 10 syllables in a line?
Who is Mercutio killed by?
Who is Tybalt?
What type of figurative language is being used in the line: “Death lies on her like an untimely frost" How do you know?
What is a simile? Two things (death and frost) are being compared using the word “like”. (may even take personification for death lying on her)
What is most likely the meaning of the play?
Always follow your heart
Disobey your parents
Love whoever you want and be with them forever
Don't let your emotions cloud your judgement
What is don't let emotions cloud your judgement?
What does the 75 stand for? (Rom. 3.2.75).
What is the line of the play?
What is the rhyme scheme for a sonnet?
What is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG?
For what reason is Romeo exiled?
What is for killing Tybalt?
What is the figurative language in this line (must give two examples and explain):
“Arise, fair sun, and kill the envious moon” (Rom. 2.2.4).
What is the significance behind the line:
“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose/By another word would smell as sweet”(Rom. 2. 2.46-47).
What is Juliet is realizing she loves Romeo, however, she is realizing that his name is the name of her enemy. She is falling in love with her enemy, but she questions how significant a name in, after all, if he went by another name, he would still be the same person she loved, just as a rose by another name is still a rose.
Who is the speaker and what can you infer about them from the lines:
“True, I talk of dreams,
Which are the children of an idle brain,
Begot of nothing but vain fantasy."
Who is Mercutio? And what is you can infer that he is a realist - he thinks dreams are silly - they are what happens when the brain isn't doing anything. They are just a form of imagination that mean nothing.
Which was not one of Juliet’s fears of taking the fake poison?
She worries that the vial could be poison.
She worries the vial won’t work and she will have to marry Paris.
She worries the potion won’t taste good
She worries that she will wake up in the tomb before Romeo comes and she will die in there.
What is she worries the potion won't taste good?
Who gives Romeo the guest list to read since he is not able to?
Who is Peter?
26. What kind of figurative language is in this line:
“Begot of nothing but vain fantasy, Which is as thin of substance as the air"? Explain.
What is a simile? Similes use like or as to make a comparison and here, fantasy is being compared to thin air using as.
What is the significance of the lines:
"For naught so vile that on the Earth doth live/
But to the Earth some special good doth give;/
Nor aught so good but, strained from that fair use,/
Revolts from true birth, stumbling on abuse./
Virtue itself turns to vice, being misapplied,/
And vice sometime by action dignified."
What is the Earth may have things that are bad and evil, but none of these things are so evil that they do not have some good quality or purpose.
But there is also nothing that would stay as good if it was but to the wrong use. Good things will turn bad if put into a situation that it is misused and bad things can sometimes get better if put to a better action.
Put the following quote into proper MLA format:
Author: William Shakespeare
Text: The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet
Scene 2
Act 4
Line 32
“Begot of nothing but vain fantasy, Which is as thin of substance as the air"
What is “Begot of nothing but vain fantasy, Which is as thin of substance as the air" (Rom. 4.2.32).
Who spoke these lines, what do they mean, and why are these lines significant to the play overall:
"Wilt thou be gone? It is not yet near day./
It was the nightingale, not the lark/
That pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear"
(Rom.3.5.1-3).
Who is Juliet? These lines mean that the two "love birds" heard a sound of a bird and the sound that they heard was a lark. A lark represents morning as opposed to a nightingale that has a sweet sound at night. Juliet is trying to convince Romeo that it was the sound of a nightingale, as in it is still night and he can still stay with her in her bedroom, where he should not be at the risk of being killed. But, in reality, it is a lark, which means he is at risk and should fear its sound. Her blissful request shows her utter lack of thinking consequences out and shows how immature and impulsive she can be when it comes to her feelings as opposed to how logical and cautious she should have been with falling in love with Romeo or even being around him.