1. <span>People over the age of 50 are not good with new technology.
2. </span><span>Feminists hate the male population and are impossible to reason with.</span><span>
Both of the above statements are generalizations (and totally wrong!)</span>
I would say that a character who is a stereotype has an over the top, exaggerated personality.
Agamemnon was the leader of the Greek troops in the Trojan wars and Orestes was his son. When Agamemno returned from the war, he was murdered by his wife's lover in conjunction with his wife. Orestes could not stop them but he seeked vengeance for his father. After a long time, he found them and avenged his father while killing them. He killed his mother, but Greek mythology claims that his act was just and he was spared the remorse and the guilt. There are a lot of similarities with the Ulysses/Telemachus father son pair. Ulysses was also one of the leaders of the excursion to Troy. He still has not returned home, but in a sense the suitors of Penelope are marring his estate and his reputation. While Penelope is faithful to Ulysses, the suitors by taking hold of the palace and committing their shameful acts are dishonoring Ulysses. In the same context, Telemachus is asked just like Orestes to restitute his father's honor, regardless of whether he is alive or dead. Athena is helping him and encouraging him with this example and he himself feels the need to save his father's honor.
Answer:
Romeo is implying that if Tybalt had obeyed the prince's orders, lives would be pulped, including his.
Explanation:
Romeo expresses how disobedience is evil and promotes pain and suffering. He reinforces that the prince had banned street fights, but Tybalt insisted on disobeying causing very negative results and that caused his own death, the death of Mercutio and exile of Romeu, who had to abandon his family and wife before being killed.