Asked by Mimi
How does Juliet’s character develop in Act 3, particularly in her responses to her parents and the Nurse?(1 point)
Responses
Juliet becomes stronger and starts to stand up for herself.
Juliet becomes stronger and starts to stand up for herself.
She is determined to control her own fate.
She is determined to control her own fate.
She feels disillusioned and betrayed by the Nurse.
She feels disillusioned and betrayed by the Nurse.
All of the above.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
All of the above.
In Act 3 Juliet grows stronger and more assertive (she refuses her parents’ demand that she marry Paris), becomes determined to control her own fate (she plans with Friar Lawrence and even threatens suicide rather than submit), and feels deeply disillusioned and betrayed by the Nurse when the Nurse tells her to marry Paris instead of supporting Romeo.
In Act 3 Juliet grows stronger and more assertive (she refuses her parents’ demand that she marry Paris), becomes determined to control her own fate (she plans with Friar Lawrence and even threatens suicide rather than submit), and feels deeply disillusioned and betrayed by the Nurse when the Nurse tells her to marry Paris instead of supporting Romeo.
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