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In Roman times, if one had to kill oneself, and one was a real man, one did it with a dagger. What does Juliet's death demonstrate?

an inversion of the masculine/feminine normative
disparate points on the continuum of "normative adult life"
the paradox that one must have lived to die
Friar Laurence's failure to instill gender norms in Juliet

User DocRoot
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Answer: Inversion of the masculine\feminine normative

Step-by-step explanation:

User Zey
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The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "an inversion of the masculine/feminine normative." At the end of the story she does kill herself with a dagger, so it would be an inversion of the masculine/feminine normative.
User Manojlds
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