Asked by AYDXN
What does Juliet mean when she says,"What's in a name? That which we call a rose/ By any other name would smell as sweet"? (Check all that apply.)
(2 points)
• That the names of things do not affect what they are.
• That she cannot love Romeo because he is a Montague.
That Romeo's name does not change the essence of who he is or her love for him.
• That names are the only thing that matter.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct choices:
- That the names of things do not affect what they are.
- That Romeo's name does not change the essence of who he is or her love for him.
Explanation: Juliet is saying a name is arbitrary — calling a rose by another name would not change its smell — so Romeo's family name (Montague) doesn't change who he is or her feelings for him.
- That the names of things do not affect what they are.
- That Romeo's name does not change the essence of who he is or her love for him.
Explanation: Juliet is saying a name is arbitrary — calling a rose by another name would not change its smell — so Romeo's family name (Montague) doesn't change who he is or her feelings for him.
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