+453
You used to think that "Wherefore art thou Romeo" meant Where are you Romeo? amirite?
by Anonymous13 years ago
To clear any problems in the future:
The 'wherefore' here means why rather than where. What Juliet is asking, in allusion to the feud between her Capulet family and Romeo's Montague clan, is 'Romeo, why are you a Montague?'. Their love is impossible because of their family names and she asks him to change his allegiance, or else she will change hers.
by Anonymous13 years ago
Thank you for posting this, I just hope people will actually read it.
by Anonymous13 years ago
It is the first comment ;)
by Anonymous13 years ago
I wanted to be the one that explained it :(
by Anonymous13 years ago
I've always thought that. Nobody told me any different. You learn something new everyday.
by Anonymous13 years ago
(Your+name+(optional)): ERRDAY.
by Anonymous13 years ago
WE LOST ROMEO?!?!
by Anonymous13 years ago
Whoa...it doesn't mean that?
by Anonymous13 years ago
Used to think that till 3 seconds ago
by Anonymous13 years ago
I thought that too, until I read the first comment. XD
by Anonymous13 years ago
you're welcome
by Anonymous13 years ago
i learned that in english class :D
by Anonymous13 years ago
oooooooooooooooohhhh
by Anonymous13 years ago
Someone told me once that "that which we call a rose/ by any other name would smell as sweet" meant that Juliet thought that Romeo smelled like flowers.
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago
by Anonymous 13 years ago