“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