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Lady Capulet thinks that Juliet weeps because of Tybalt’s death and tries to comfort her telling her that they will have “vengeance for it” (3.5.92). The audience knows that Juliet is really crying for Romeo, so this is an example of: Question 5 options: foreshadowing dramatic irony allusion oxymoron

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Answer:

DRAMATIC IRONY

Step-by-step explanation:

User Kinna T
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You can't really justify anything but dramatic irony.

It isn't foreshadowing. She is genuinely weeping and it has nothing to do with future events

There is no allusion in this. Her crying is not symbolic. Nor does it refer back to anything

An oxymoron is a contradiction that seems false or unrelated but isn't. Her weeping is genuine. You might be able to make a case for this but dramatic irony is much better: Juliet's mother thinks one thing, the audience knows another.

User Tishana
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