no all the foreshadowing was done in acts 1-4
There are many, many famous quotes from the play, but here is one which sums up the plot well, said by Juliet in Act II Scene V: My only love sprung from my only hate. Too early seen unknown, and known too late. Prodigious birth of love it is to me, That I must love a loathed enemy. "Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo" (= Romeo, WHY are you called Romeo)
Juliet, Romeo, Tybalt, Nurse, Benvolio Or . . . Juliet, Romeo, Friar Lawrence, Nurse, Capulet Or . . . Juliet, Romeo, Friar Lawrence, Capulet, Tybalt Or . . . Juliet, Romeo, Capulet, Mercutio, Tybalt Or basically Romeo and Juliet and any three of Nurse, Friar, Capulet, Mercutio, or Tybalt.
While this is not stated directly in the text, cultural context, in-text indicators, and literary tradition state that they were approximately 17 and 14, respectively, at the fearful passage of their death-marked love.
It is difficult to say. Most people have heard of Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet. They know the plays they studied in school. Many of them will not have any contact with Shakespeare after.
Any character who is not Juliet.
Romeo and Juliet. When Juliet, who is a Capulet, finds out Romeo is a Montague, she is torn because of her feelings toward him, and the feelings her family has towards his family, or in this case, his name. She is saying the feelings she has shouldn't change just because she learned his last name. Everyone knows what a rose is and how it smells, but what if we called it something we know to be ugly and capable of hurting you, like a cactus? It would still be pretty and smell wonderful, making a name just that....a name.
The nurse says to Romeo: "if you should deal double with her, truly it were an ill thing to be offered to any gentlewoman and very weak dealing." The nurse would like to warn Romeo against trifling with Juliet but she has some difficulty visualizing what the adverse consequences for Romeo might be. The warning therefore falls rather flat.
There is dramatic irony in Act II Scene 1 when Mercutio is taunting the unseen Romeo about his love for Rosaline. Romeo knows, and the audience knows, that Romeo doesn't care about her any more.
There are many, many famous quotes from the play, but here is one which sums up the plot well, said by Juliet in Act II Scene V: My only love sprung from my only hate. Too early seen unknown, and known too late. Prodigious birth of love it is to me, That I must love a loathed enemy. "Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo" (= Romeo, WHY are you called Romeo)
no
That quote is from the William Shakespeare play Romeo and Juliet.
Juliet, Romeo, Tybalt, Nurse, Benvolio Or . . . Juliet, Romeo, Friar Lawrence, Nurse, Capulet Or . . . Juliet, Romeo, Friar Lawrence, Capulet, Tybalt Or . . . Juliet, Romeo, Capulet, Mercutio, Tybalt Or basically Romeo and Juliet and any three of Nurse, Friar, Capulet, Mercutio, or Tybalt.
But she does, just not onstage. The nurse would not be able to take her message to Romeo in Act II Scene 4, nor have any reason to warn Romeo not to lead Juliet into a "fool's paradise" or "deal double" with her if she didn't know how Juliet cared for Romeo. Nor would she tease Juliet in Scene 5 by withholding Romeo's plan to marry her if she didn't know how desperately Juliet was waiting to hear just this news.
In this very short scene Friar Laurence does make some statements about the future: "The letter was not nice, but full of charge of dear import, and the neglecting it may do some damage." and "Within this three hours will fair Juliet wake; she will beshrew me much that Romeo hath had no notice of these accidents." The second of these contains a prediction, but an inaccurate one: Juliet will not complain about Romeo's lack of notice. It can hardly be called foreshadowing. As for the rest, if the audience has been following, they will have already seen that neglecting the delivery of the letter has done some damage in the previous scene. If it has already been shown to the audience it cannot be foreshadowing. They will also know that Juliet is to wake up soon, although they have not actually seen it. Foreshadowing is when the writer hints at an unknown or unexpected future plot development, and there is none of that here. Your instructor may have the mistaken idea that any statement about what is to happen in the future is foreshadowing, but that is not correct. Indeed, why would Shakespeare employ foreshadowing in an extremely short and practical scene (its purpose is to explain the arrival of the Friar at the tomb) which is the second-last scene in the entire play? A minute later all will reach its conclusion.
While this is not stated directly in the text, cultural context, in-text indicators, and literary tradition state that they were approximately 17 and 14, respectively, at the fearful passage of their death-marked love.
Juliet.
The Romeo and Juliet you have heard about isn't any category of poem at all. It's a play.