English Romeo and Juliet Flashcards

1
Q

“I will push ( ? ), and thrust his maids ( ? )”

A

“I will push Montague’s men from the wall, and thrust his maids to the wall” -Capulet Servants

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2
Q

“I hate the word as I hate hell, ( ? )”

A

“I hate the word as I hate hell, all Montagues and thee” -Tybalt

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3
Q

“Look upon ( ? )”

A

“Look upon thy death” -Tybalt

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4
Q

”( ? )the morning dew”

A

“augmenting the morning dew” -Romeo

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5
Q

“my child is ( ? ) in this world”

A

“my child is yet a stranger in this world” -Lord C

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6
Q

“She’s the ( ? )”

A

“She’s the hopeful lady of my Earth” -Lord C

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7
Q

“This unbound lover, To beautify him, ( ? )”

A

“This unbound lover, To beautify him, only lacks a cover” -Lady C

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8
Q

”( ? ) I e’er nursed”

A

“Prettiest babe I e’er nursed” -Nurse

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9
Q

“Seek ( ? ) to ( ? )”

A

“Seek happy nights to happy days” -Nurse

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10
Q

“If love be rough with you, ( ? ): Prick love for pricking, ( ? )”

A

“If love be rough with you, be rough with love: Prick love for pricking, and you beat love down” -Mercutio

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11
Q

“beauty ( ? ), for Earth too dear”

A

“beauty too rich for use, for Earth too dear” -Romeo

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12
Q

”( ? ) until this night”

A

“for I ne’er saw true beauty until this night” -Romeo

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13
Q

“If I profane with my ( ? )”

A

“If I profane with my unworthiest hand” -Romeo

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14
Q

”( ? ) sprung from my only hate”

A

“my only love sprung from my only hate” -Juliet

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15
Q

“What’s in a name?… ( ? ).”

A

“What’s in a name?… A rose by any other word would smell as sweet.” -Juliet

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16
Q

“To strike him dead, ( ? )”

A

“To strike him dead, I hold it not a sin” -Tybalt

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17
Q

”( ? ) in the different greeting”

A

“makes my flesh tremble in the different greeting” -Tybalt

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18
Q

“By her ( ? ). By her fine foot, straight leg, and ( ? )”

A

“By her high forehead and her scarlet lip. By her fine foot, straight leg, and quivering thigh” -Mercutio

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19
Q

“Juliet is the sun that kills the ( ? )”

A

“Juliet is the sun that kills the envious moon” -Romeo

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20
Q

“The ( ? ) would shame those stars”

A

“The brightness of her cheek would shame those stars” -Romeo

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21
Q

“Young men’s love then ( ? ), but in their eyes”

A

“Young men’s love then lies not truly in their hearts, but in their eyes” -Friar

22
Q

“Women ( ? ) in men”

A

“Women may fall when there’s no strength in men” -Friar

23
Q

“Alas, ( ? ), he is already dead”

A

“Alas, poor Romeo, he is already dead” -Mercutio

24
Q

“Dido a ( ? ), Cleopatra a gipsy, Helen and Hero ( ? )”

A

“Dido a dowdy, Cleopatra a gipsy, Helen and Hero hildings and harlets” -Mercutio

25
Q

“make it a ( ? )”

A

“make it a word and a blow” -Mercutio

26
Q

“Here’s my ( ? ), here’s that shall ( ? )”

A

“Here’s my fiddlestick, here’s that shall make you dance” -Mercutio

27
Q

“O calm, ( ? )”

A

“O calm, dishonorable, vile submission” -Mercutio

28
Q

“they have made ( ? ) of me”

A

“they have made worms meat of me” -Mercutio

29
Q

“a ( ? ) o’ both your houses”

A

“a plague o’ both your houses” -Mercutio

30
Q

“thou art ( ? )”

A

“thou art a villain” -Tybalt

31
Q

“boy… therefore ( ? )”

A

“boy… therefore turn and draw” -Tybalt

32
Q

“I have bought the mansion of love but have ( ? )”

A

“I have bought the mansion of love but have not possessed it yet” -Juliet

33
Q

“cut him out in little stars and he will ( ? )”

A

“cut him out in little stars and he will make the face of heaven fine” -Juliet

34
Q

“Did ever ( ? ) a cave?”

A

“Did ever a dragon keep so fair a cave?” -Juliet

35
Q

”( ? ) tyrant, ( ? ) angelical!”

A

“Beautiful tyrant, fiend angelical!” -Juliet

36
Q

”( ? ) raven, ( ? ) lamb!”

A

“Dove feather’d raven, wolvish-ravening lamb!” -Juliet

37
Q

”( ? ) that is my husband?”

A

“shall I speak ill of him that is my husband?” -Juliet

38
Q

“She will be ( ? ); I doubt it not.”

A

“She will be ruled in all aspects by me; I doubt it not.” -Paris

39
Q

”( ? ) wretch!”

A

“disobedient wretch!” -Lord C

40
Q

“my fingers ( ? )”

A

“my fingers itch” -Lord C

41
Q

”( ? ), die in the streets”

A

“hang, beg, starve, die in the streets” -Lord C

42
Q

“Thy face is mine and ( ? )”

A

“Thy face is mine and thou hast slandered it” -Paris

43
Q

“Death lies on her like ( ? ). Upon the ( ? ) of all the field.”

A

“Death lies on her like an untimely frost. Upon the sweetest flower of all the field.” -Lord C

44
Q

”( ? ) breaks to new mutiny”

A

“Ancient grudge breaks to new mutiny” -Prologue

45
Q

”( ? ) be my conduct now”

A

“Fiery eyed fury be my conduct now” -Tybalt

46
Q

“O ( ? ) dagger”

A

“O happy dagger” -Juliet

47
Q

“There never was a story of such woe than that of ( ? )”

A

“There never was a story of such woe than that of Juliet and her Romeo” -Story

48
Q

“This ( ? ) prove to turn your household’s ( ? )”

A

“This alliance may so happy prove to turn your household’s rancour to pure love” -Friar

49
Q

“These ( ? ) have violent ends.”

A

“These violent delights have violent ends.” -Friar

50
Q

“Art thou a man? Thy tears are ( ? )”

A

“Art thou a man? Thy tears are womanish”

51
Q

“Seeming ( ? ) man’s body”

A

“Seeming woman in a man’s body”