Overhearing talk on trains, in the supermarket etc. suggests to me that language is overwhelmingly used in gossip, particularly to bond two people together by confirming their joint opinion (usually negative) of someone else not present, either known personally or a public figure. It is not about transferring information or giving orders or warnings or the other things that some hypotheses of the evolution of language suggest that it should be about. Of course, language might have been co-opted for uses other than its original one (we did not evolve opposable thumbs to play Nintendo). But are there systematic studies of what people actually use language for outside the lab.?
This probably isn't the answer you are looking for, but they bathed more than the common people of their era and slightly less than people of today.
Hope this helps even a little.
Answer:
He won't let Romeo get away with gate crashing the Capulet feast. Although he does put his weapon down, he does do so reluctantly, under his uncle's orders. He threatens revenge upon the young Montague. This, of course, foreshadows the tragic future of Romeo and Juliet (deaths of the two protagonists) as the Prologue at the beginning of act 1 states.
Hope this helps.
Apau kuai Yaj kuia uaiahwjw
Depende que tipo de fumar se seus charutos você não pode realmente impedi-los , mas se é algo ilegal como maconha do que a polícia de chamada