Lady Capulet tries to convince Juliet that Paris is the perfect man for her by magnifying him to persuade Juliet round to the idea. Lady Capulet expects marriage to be an easy thing to consider and agree to; this means her expectations of Juliet are to take the hand of whomever Capulet & Lady Capulet think is the perfect man and not of whom Juliet thinks is best. Lady Caplet has shown she has taken up her role in the Patriarchal Hegemony that surrounds Veronese society and she and all women have not made any effort to change it, but instead have absorbed and continued through with the tradition without any question of if it is right or fair to women. Lady Capulet is typical of women of the time as her marriage to Capulet is portrayed to be one of power , money and status rather than of love.
Juliet does not feel this Patriarchal Hegemony is how Veronese society should function but instead considers love as her greatest priority, rather than something that is not even thought of until after marriage. The question of money and power is not one of great deliberation to Juliet but it is instead just a consideration but not a reason for marriage. Juliet feels that this offer of marriage from Lady Capulet cannot be overcome by saying no, so chooses to bend her answer as to not say yes or no but to give Lady Capulet an answer she can be content with but not pledge to the idea as Juliet is not convinced this is the right path to love and happiness. Juliet is determined and unafraid to make her own decisions. She has her own ideals that cannot be changed, shown by the way she cannot make a decision just from what her parents want, and wants to judge Paris herself. This also shows her independence and strong will, which is not expressed openly by women in those times.