Before the announcement of the marriage arrangement between Juliet and Paris, the nurse is supportive of Juliet's love for Romeo and helps her to secretly get married. However, after the Capulets tell Juliet she must marry Paris or get out, the nurse no longer encourages Juliet's marriage to Romeo. The nurse urges Juliet to forget her marriage to Romeo - pretend like it didn't happen - and marry Paris.
This change in the nurse causes Juliet to lie and agree with her. She says that she is going to confession to atone for her sins. However, Juliet is actually going to speak with Friar Lawrence as he is the only person she can turn to for help. Juliet no longer can trust her nurse, and with Romeo being banished, this makes her very alone.
The nurse is no longer Juliet's confidant. At first, the nurse was seen as some that was always on Juliet's side. She was willing to help Juliet go behind her parent's back to marry Romeo. However, the nurse is now seen as a person who will only support Juliet until her parents get involved. Then the nurse will take her parents' side.
I'm raylynn I'm 17 years old , I would like to offer some advice when it comes to a paragraph and personal opinions weigh out the pros and cons of downloading movies illegally , ask what it dose to the environment and other things but always use your personal opinion and you'll persevere , remember don't go off detail
Answer:
yes I agree this statement. if all the people will go towards development then there will be less struggle for poor people and less crimes because as the development is going on, all the security will be more tight which will not make anything which will lead us to the place where we will need justice. and like this our actions matter and can bent history in the direction of justice
Answer: The right answer is the D) decorated with a drape of lacy hallmarked silver.
Explanation: Just to elaborate a little on the answer, it can be added that since they are asking for descriptive details that help visualize the specific early Victorian tea set, option A can be discarded, since that set was not representative of Wedgwood's most expensive ceramics. In addition, options B and C should also be discarded, since those are not particularly descriptive details and they do not specifically help visualize the piece. The detail that refers to the specific aspect of the piece—the presence of a drape of lacy hallmarked silver—is, therefore, the one that best helps visualize the artifact.