There are different kinds of quotes. The quotes that best supports the answer to Part A is “Call me but love, and I’ll be new baptiz’d; / Henceforth I never will be Romeo.” ( Lines 33-34)
- When call me but love and I'll be new baptized has a meaning. The fact that Romeo says, “Call me but love and I'll be new baptized. Henceforth, I never will be Romeo” shows that Romeo loves Juliet so much that he is very willing to drop his name just to be with her, his Families' mortal enemy.
Romeo and Juliet is a an award winning drama and it is also a tragedy play that was written by William Shakespeare. The play was about two young Italian lovers whose deaths brought about the end of the dirty feuds between their families.
Learn more about Romeo and Juliet from
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<span>I couldn't find a more appropriate place to put an "edit request" of this nature, if there is onecan someone either replicate it there or let me know, thanks — IVORK Discuss 01:54, 16 April 2018 ..... On Wikipedia we woould use the term 'reliable source' and you can find out more about how that applies at WP:RS. bc they r right</span><span>
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<u>Answer:</u>
You didn't include the answer choices, but a question with the same wording popped up on the quiz I just took and the answer for me was B : They suspect something strange may be going on.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
The following part from the artilce justifies the answer choice:
shakespeare’s early plays were marked by a crude—almost vulgar—style that is so far from what we think of as “shakespeare” that most people have never even heard of the plays, much less seen them performed. his early tragedy titus andronicus is as bloody (and stupid) as any gory horror movie now seen at the cineplex. shortly after his blockbuster success with the early history/tragedy richard iii, shakespeare wrote his greatest plays, the ones everyone knows, at least by title: julius caesar, hamlet, othello, macbeth, and king lear. but great as these plays are, they too often have weak spots. hamlet, as any director will tell you, is far too long—the longest play shakespeare wrote and is full of digressions and long topical speeches that are incomprehensible to anyone but a person of shakespeare’s day and age