All 12 Uses
banish
in
Romeo and Juliet -- adapted by Gorman
(Edited)
- Romeo, who killed him, has been banished.
p. 55.7banished = expelled or gotten rid of
- But Romeo is banished!
p. 56.9
- The Prince has decided you will not die, But you will be banished.
p. 57.9 *banished = forced to leave the community
- ROMEO: Banished?
p. 58.1banished = expelled or gotten rid of
- Banishment is worse than death to me.
p. 58.1banishment = to expel or get rid of
- FRIAR: You are banished from Verona.
p. 58.1banished = expelled or gotten rid of
- He is banished.
p. 58.7
- Don't you have poison, a sharp knife, Some sudden means of death— Other than banishment—to kill me?
p. 58.9banishment = to expel or get rid of
- If you were as young as I and loved Juliet, Married an hour, and banished For killing her cousin, then you might speak.
p. 59.4banished = expelled or gotten rid of
- NURSE: Here it is: Romeo is banished.
p. 68.2
- PARIS: It is that banished proud Montague Who murdered my love's cousin.
p. 88.2
- I married them On the day of Tybalt's death, Which banished the groom from this city.
p. 94.4
Definitions:
-
(1)
(banish) to expel or get rid ofin various senses, including:
- to force someone to leave a country as punishment
- to push an idea from the mind
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)