Answer:
Initially , Shakespeare conveniently conveys the nurses incapablity to understand the love Juliet feels towards Romeo, when the Nurse betrays Juliet, they have artificial trust and love between them as they slowly fall apart.
Fundamentally, Shakespeare dramatically depicts Juliet’s and the Nurse’s relationship simultaneously escorted by extinct memories of the past between the nurse and when Juliet was younger. The nurse and Juliet bonds, during when the nurse breast feeds Juliet acting as a mother figure in modern day society compared to Shakespearian time, when breast feeding from the biological mother was seen as a potential possibility of inflicting inerasable damage to the mother’s body. The nurse of lower status and no power taken care of Juliet ‘thou wast the prettiest babe that i e’er i nurse’ highlighting how much affection the nurse grips for Juliet. The essence of time between the nurse and Juliet depicts their relationship and memories, with slowly built their relationship and friendship over time.
Finally, the development purposely utilised the function from the Nurse when she betrays Juliet’s emotions and belief in the nurse. Shakespeare deliberately manifolds a distinguished trust, when a pivotal moment arise at the end of the act, deliberately adding Juliet’s independence and lonesomeness, after the nurse has asked Juliet to marry Paris, which is a mortal sin to marry twice ‘I think it’s best you marry with the County’ the nurse has turned away from Juliet to act upon her families wishes, this creates a atmosphere of anger and uncontrollable denial that the nurse would betray Juliet, the atmosphere contrasts into chaotic anger in Juliet.
Summarising this after effect, the nurse never understood Juliet’s mind even after being with Juliet for a long time. Their trust was morally based off time but not understanding, the nurse betrays Juliet by failing to recognise Juliet’s distress.