My presentation is on why we should be able to use mobiles in class,mobils are inceradabley intelligent devices unlike people that are telling me that i should not use them,i should think about the topic more to understand it better, but we do not live in the 18th century were people use insyclopeaders to find things out and to make us understand the topic,we have the worlds knowledge in our pockets and at our feet and that I can understand but with this device i can tack my leaning to the next level by using my phone or mobile i think that my under standing more than u,u might be threatened by this and i understand that, the way u might fill but at least i can a mobile to better my understanding unlike u and people of your stacher

i ser pose that when the ball point pen come out in the early 20Th. century people sead it was scary and people was scard to use it because it was different and that is people biggest fear witch is change ,but change can happen for good and this is was a change for good , better, and so can mobile phones

When we use the mobile devices for positive reasons ie Internet Be on track and and the correct task scorches

I admit that most mobile divies has apps where people can play games and go on sosil networking sites but this morning is was in formed that u can have a meatball wire installed in the roo witch blooksang utter apps and u can controll what apps what they go on and this will cost a small amount of 80 pounds. And this product can be used to better are knowledge and brain waves.

I hope u can see my point Thank u

Edward garret

I think freedom is when something or someone has a right to be free. It is when a person is allowed to do what they want as long as they abide by the laws.But if they violate the laws they lose their right to freedom as the punishment for impinging on other peoples’ rights and freedoms.Sometimes they do community service to help the community to be safer.

In other countries there is freedom of expression, information ,movement and the right to live freely. These countries are called democratic and they include England,USA, France and others.

In some, there is no freedom at all.No freedom of expression , no freedom of movement and no freedom of expression.These countries are called communist or totalitarian nations and North Korea is a good example of this.In such countries the government controls the press, information and peoples’ way of living.

Juliet and her nurse make the final preparations for the wedding that is to take place the following morning. Lady Capulet offers her assistance, but Juliet asks to be left to her prayers and sends the Nurseand her mother away. Juliet then reflects on the Friar’s plan. She wonders if the Friar has given her actual poison to cover his role in marrying a Capulet and a Montague. She decides she must trust the Friar. However if the potion fails to work, she resolves to die rather than marry Paris. To that end, she places a dagger by her bedside. Juliet’s imagination runs wild as she imagines the horrors she will face if the plan does not work and she awakens alone in the tomb. Only when she imagines Tybalt’s ghost moving toward Romeo to avenge itself does she muster the courage to take the potion and intercept Tybalt:

O look, methinks I see my cousin’s ghost

Seeking out Romeo that did spit his body

Upon a rapier’s point! Stay, Tybalt, stay!

Juliet asserts her independence in this scene by asking her betrayers, the Nurse and Lady Capulet, to leave her alone. By this action, she both physically separates herself from her family and proactively takes a step toward the fruition of her plan to be with Romeo. This direct request marks a turning point for Juliet. Previously, she often reacted to her surroundings rather than making her own decisions. For example, she waited for instruction from Romeo as to when they would wed; she allowed her father to order a marriage to someone else; and she depended on the Friar to provide her with a plan to avoid a union with Paris.

As the play has progressed, however, she has grown more mature and independent. She now steps forward to confront her greatest fears and reach toward her ultimate goal — to be with Romeo.

When Juliet is left alone, she is struck by the horror of her situation. She imagines the gruesome, grisly, nightmarish horrors one would expect of a 13-year-old facing her own mortality: being buried alive in the airless tomb and facing Tybalt’s corpse “festering in his shroud.” At that moment, she is tempted to call for her nurse. However, at the instant of her greatest fear, Juliet realizes that she must act independently. She displays mature courage and determination as she prepares to take the final step in her defiance of both her parents and fate itself. Juliet accepts that she must now trust the Friar’s potion, and if the plan fails, be prepared to take her own life with the dagger at her bedside.

Once again, the play draws upon the themes of birth and death to emphasize the way in which Juliet must die and be placed in the tomb in order to be reborn to begin her new life with Romeo. She is resolute in her decisions. Her maturity has blossomed. She is no longer a young teenager; she is a woman and a wife who commands her own fortune. To this end, she places a dagger by her side — a resonant statement of her independence.

Juliet returns to the Capulet house to find wedding preparations well underway. She tells her father that she will abide by his wishes and agree to marry Paris. Lord Capulet is so overjoyed at the news that he decides to move the wedding from Thursday to Wednesday. Lady Capulet protests, saying that such quick notice doesn’t allow enough time to prepare, but the euphoric Lord Capulet ignores her. Juliet is now to be married the following morning.

Here, fate twists Juliet’s fortunes once again. Capulet, in his impulsive zeal, complicates the Friar’s plan by moving the wedding forward a full day. Juliet must take the potion that night and lapse into a suspended state 24 hours sooner than the Friar had anticipated. This development reduces the amount of time the Friar will have to notify Romeo in Mantua.

Juliet has acquiesced to Capulet’s reckless whims and appears compliant — even excited to an extent. This enthusiasm, however feigned, seems to heighten her father’s zeal even further. Juliet shows great composure in facing her father, even though she knows that his plans and her arrangements are so different. Juliet’s enthusiasm is, however, at least somewhat genuine since the mechanism by which she intends to resolve her personal crisis is already in motion.

Capulet, of course, misinterprets Juliet’s apparent good cheer, believing that Friar Laurence has persuaded Juliet to marry Paris. Capulet is characteristically impulsive, rash, and unpredictable. His blind enthusiasm leads him to insist that his entire family and staff work through the night to make adequate preparations for the hastened ceremony. In this scene, he shows a greater disrespect for his wife than in previous scenes. His blathering authoritarianism reaches new levels as he again insults Juliet, accusing her of “peevish, self-willed harlotry.” He completely dominates his wife, disregarding her desire to delay the wedding and ordering her to Juliet’s room to help the Nurse.

The comparison between Juliet and her mother is noteworthy. Whereas Lady Capulet cannot exercise any control in her life and receives no respect from her husband, Juliet has taken control of her life and tries to exert some influence over her situation. She has become self-possessed to the extent that she can command her own fate; however, when society eliminates her options, she is left with the only thing she can control — her death.

Juliet displays remarkable powers of duplicity as she describes her meeting with Paris at the Friar’s cell. She tells her father that she gave him, “what becomed love I might / Not stepping o’er the bounds of modesty.” To Capulet, the statement confirms Juliet’s total compliance with his wishes. Clearly, however, as Romeo’s wife, Juliet’s devotion to Romeo is absolute.

Juliet’s duplicity goes beyond her skillful use of language. She partakes willingly in the wedding preparation; however, amid all the frenzy, Juliet prepares for her presumed death. She has emotionally removed herself from her surroundings. Her trust rests in the Friar and her love in Romeo. The Capulet household is alive with activity on her behalf — for an occasion she neither desires nor intends to attend. The people around her have betrayed her, and the wedding preparations manifest that betrayal.

On Tuesday morning, Paris tells Friar Laurence of his proposed marriage to Juliet — a wedding scheduled to take place in two days. The Friar expresses concern that the wedding has been arranged too quickly, and he offers various reasons to delay the ceremony. Paris believes that Capulet hastened the nuptials out of concern for Juliet’s grief over Tybalt’s death.

Juliet arrives at the Friar’s cell and manages to cleverly sidestep Paris’ compliments and references to their upcoming marriage. Paris then leaves, and Juliet begs the Friar for a solution to her tragic dilemma because she fears that death is her only option. The Friar offers Juliet a remedy — a sleeping potion that she is to take on Wednesday night, the evening before the wedding. The potion will render Juliet unconscious, and she will appear to be dead for 42 hours, during which time her body will rest in the family tomb. In the meantime, the Friar will let Romeo know of this plan. Juliet immediately agrees and leaves with the potion.

At dawn on Tuesday morning, Romeo and Juliet make their final exchanges of love before Romeo leaves for Mantua. The lovers try to resist the coming day that heralds their separation by pretending that it is still night and that the bird they hear is the nightingale and not the lark, a morning bird. However, the ominous threat of the Prince’s sentence of death finally forces the lovers to part.

Juliet’s mother arrives and, believing that Juliet weeps for Tybalt rather than the departure of Romeo, tries to comfort Juliet with her plan to have Romeo poisoned. Lady Capulet then tells Juliet the happy news that she is to marry Paris on Thursday. Juliet is stunned and tells her mother that she cannot be married in such haste.

Her father enters expecting to find Juliet excited about the wedding he arranged on her behalf. When she expresses opposition, he becomes enraged and demands that Juliet obey his “decree” and prepare to be wed. The Nurse tries to defend Juliet, but to no avail. Capulet threatens to disown his daughter if she continues to oppose him. The scene concludes with the Nurse advising Juliet to obey her father, and Juliet resolves to seek the advice of Friar Laurence.

Late on Monday evening, Capulet and Paris discuss how Juliet’s grief over Tybalt’s death has prevented Paris from continuing his courtship of Juliet. Suddenly, as Paris prepares to leave, Capulet offers him Juliet’s hand in marriage. He tells Paris that Juliet will obey his patriarchal wishes and marry Paris on Thursday. Paris eagerly agrees to the arrangements, and Lady Capulet is sent to convey the news to Juliet.

Friar Laurence tells Romeo that the Prince has sentenced him to banishment rather than death. Romeo is distraught because he regards banishment as a form of living death when he cannot be with Juliet. The Friar tries to reason with Romeo, but young Romeo is inconsolable — “with his own tears made drunk.” The Nurse arrives and tells Romeo of Juliet’s grief. Hearing this, Romeo tries to take his own life, but is prevented by the Nurse. The Friar advises Romeo to go to Juliet that night as he had planned, and then before daybreak, flee to Mantua. The Friar promises to find a way to announce Romeo and Juliet’s marriage publicly and thereby gain a pardon for Romeo to return safely.

Juliet waits impatiently for night to fall so that she can celebrate her wedding night with Romeo. The Nursearrives and in her grief, misleads Juliet into thinking that Romeo has been killed. When the Nurse eventually reveals that it is Tybalt who is dead, Juliet’s fears are only slightly relieved. Upon hearing that Romeo has been banished, Juliet is overwhelmed by grief. The Nurse tells Juliet that Romeo is hiding at Friar Laurence’s cell and Juliet sends the Nurse with a ring, bidding Romeo to come and “take his last farewell.”

During the heat of the day, Benvolio and Mercutio are loitering on the streets of Verona when Tybalt arrives looking for Romeo. Benvolio wishes to avoid a confrontation with the Capulets; however, Mercutio is deliberately provocative and tries to draw Tybalt into an argument so that they can fight.

Romeo appears and Tybalt insults him, hoping he will respond to the challenge, but Romeo refuses because he is now related to Tybalt through his marriage to Juliet. Mercutio, disgusted by Romeo’s reluctance to fight, answers Tybalt’s insults on Romeo’s behalf. Tybalt and Mercutio draw their swords and fight. To stop the battle, Romeo steps between them and Tybalt stabs Mercutio under Romeo’s arm. Mercutio’s wound is fatal and he dies crying “A plague o’ both your houses!” Blinded by rage over Mercutio’s death, Romeo attacks Tybalt and kills him.

Romeo is forced to flee a mob of citizens as the Prince, the heads of the two households, and their wives appear at the scene. After Benvolio gives an account of what has happened, the Prince banishes Romeo from Verona under the penalty of death and orders Lords Montague and Capulet to pay a heavy fine.

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