Act V, Scene lll, Lines 160-167 Romeo and Juliet have their final kiss. Juliet says I will kiss the lips Haply some poison yet both hang on them, To make die with a restorative.  
soliloquy - Final kiss
I shall kiss you
Act lll, Scene l, Lines 101-102Mercutio says, "Ask for me tomorrow, and you shall find me a grave man." These are some of Mercutio's dying words. The word grave is used as a pun.
Ask for me tomorrow, and you shall find me a grave man.
Pun - Ask for me tomorrow
Act lll, scene v, Lines 121-123Juliet says she would rather marry Romeo than Paris.  She rejects the match, saying I will not marry yet and when I do, I swear i It shall be Romeo. 
Verbal irony - Juliet will not marry yet
I will not marry yet and when I do, I swear i It shall be Romeo
Act 1, Scene 5, lines 55 and 56Romeo uses imagery to describe Juliet's beauty when he says, So shows a dove trooping with crows.  He describes her as a source of light, like a star, against the darkness
Imagery - Juliet's beauty
Oh Juliet my dear you look so beautiful 
Oh ty!!
Act 5, scene 1-2, Lines 24-34Romeo attempts to defy that fate by killing himself and spending eternity with Juliet: “Well, Juliet,” he says, “I will lie with thee tonight”.  His very decision to avoid his destiny
Dramatic irony - Romeos death
I shall kill myself i will lie with thee tonight
Foreshadowing - Romeos exciting dream
Act v, Scene 1, Lines 24 Romeo had a dream about Juliet finding him dead and bringing him back to live and breathed new life into his body. Romeo comments that nothing can be ill in the world if Juliet is well.
That was such a good dream
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