 Starting Romeo and Juliet, let's look at key quotes showing Juliet's headstrong character. In Act 2 Scene 2, Juliet says, To spot thy name, that's my enemy, and the letteration of T here shows she's very stubborn, headstrong. She doesn't believe that she shouldn't love Romeo just because he's a Montague. She reflects Romeo, thou art thyself, and here the caesura shows that Juliet is pausing, reflecting. She's just not mindlessly thinking that just because she's a capillate, she needs to hate Romeo. The repetition of the words Montague show that Juliet is reflecting on how silly the fighting between the families really is. She says the word Montague is just a name, it's not a hand, foot, arm or face, and this belongs to a semantic field of body parts. In other words, she's saying that a name is only that, just a name. Juliet asks, what's in a name? And this rhetorical question shows she goes against tradition and duty towards her family. Again, as we can see here, she's very headstrong. She says Romeo, doth thy name, and this imperative sentence is basically her saying Romeo, throw away your name. She commands and instead take all myself and this imperative sentence again, shows that Juliet is headstrong and she knows what she wants.