They are alike because both are just alike..
The only way they are both alike as if they a equilateral.
they are alike because they both have 2 bases
they are both quadrilatterals
A pyramid and a cone are alike because they are both are like in the same shape.
the phrase "two households both alike in dignity" means that the two families in the play (which are the montagues and the capulets) are equal. they were both high class families and "alike in dignity" means that they were very much the same.
When it says "Two households both alike in dignity" it means two families that are exactly the same.
Verona, Italy Two households, both alike in dignity, In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,
Those are the first lines of Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare
No, their families were "both alike in dignity".
The Prologue is the first to speak: "Two households, both alike in dignity..." If you mean which of the characters, Romeo or Juliet speaks first, it is Romeo in Act I scene 1. Juliet does not appear until Act I scene 3
There isn't any free verse in Romeo and Juliet--not in Shakespeare's in any case. Perhaps you are thinking of blank verse. There is lots of that. An example is the first line, "Two households both alike in dignity."
Well, we learn that it is a Principality, ruled by a Prince. We learn that there are two households both alike in dignity who have an ancient grudge and are fighting each other. Everyone appears to be Catholic and there is only one priest for the whole town.
"Both alike in dignity" is a phrase from Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," referring to the equal social standing and worth of two individuals (Romeo and Juliet) despite their families being in conflict. It highlights the idea that love transcends social barriers.
Well he tells you that it will be about two households in the city of Verona, both alike in dignity, who have been fighting each other. The children of these two household will be a pair of star-crossed lovers, who will have misadventures, and piteous reversals of fortune, and die, and this will bury their parents' strife.
Do you mean "Two households, both alike in dignity, in fair Verona where we lay our scene, from ancient grudge break to new mutiny where civil blood makes civil hands unclean."? The key to the sentence is "Two households . . . from ancient grudge break to new mutiny." The two households are two families who have an "ancient grudge". Ancient means old, right? So they break out in a new "mutiny"--a new breach of the peace. The rest is all trimming. We learn that the two families are "alike in dignity"--they have the same social status. They are in Verona, which is where "we lay our scene", or where the scene is set. The mutiny is making hands dirty with blood, and there is a play on the word civil, which means both "of the city" and "polite".
This verse is an example of iambic pentameter because it consists of ten syllables arranged in five pairs, or iambs, where each pair has one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. This rhythmic pattern creates a sense of regularity and flow in the verse.