“it is the east, and juliet is the sun!”...

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“It is the East, and Juliet is the sun!” (2.2.3).

To get or obtain

To get or obtain = procure

[aside]“Shall I hear

more, or shall I speak

at this?” (2.2.37).

“O, swear not by the

moon, the inconstant

moon, / That monthly

changes in her circle

orb,/Lest thy love prove

likewise” (2.2.109-111).

“It is too rash, too

unadvised, too

sudden; / Too like the

lightning which doth

cease to be” (2. 2.

118-120).

Act of pleading on

another’s behalf

= intercession

“My bounty is as

boundless as the

sea,/ My love as

deep…” (2.2.133-

4).

Distressing; sad

= lamentable

“Good night, good

night! Parting is such

sweet sorrow/ That I

shall have to say

good night till it be

morrow” (2.2.184-5).

“Virtue itself turns

vice, being

misapplied,/And vice

sometime b action

dignified” (2.3.21-22).

“Then plainly know

my hearts dear love

is set/On the fair

daughter of rich

Capulet” (2.3.57-8).

“For this alliance may so

happy prove / To turn

your households’ rancor

to pure love” (3.3.91-2).

Sickly or yellowish hue

= sallow

“Wisely and slow. They

stumble that run fast”

(2.3.94).

“…that Petrarch

flowed in. Laura, to

his lady, was/a

kitchen wench, Dido

a dowdy, Cleopatra

a gypsy, Helen…”

(2.4.39-43).

“O single-soled

jest, solely singular

for the singleness!”

(2.4.65).

Awkward; clumsy

= unwieldy

“These violent

delights have

violent ends”

(2.6.9).

“Therefore love

moderately; long love

doth so;/Too swift

arrives as too slow”

(2.6.14-15).

Having greater

frequency, strength,

or influence

= predominant

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