In the garbage can. No Fear Shakespeare has been described by one professor as "The Reader Made Stupid Series." Because it sucks all the difficult poetry out of the lines, it takes away the most significant reason why people should study Shakespeare in the first place--his use of poetic language. A school is there to teach new things to students, like how to understand poetry--something which they may never have encountered in their lives before. If the desire is merely to read a summary of the plot of the play, the students may as well read Charles and Mary Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare.
Yes, "No Fear Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet" does not have a corresponding Accelerated Reader (AR) test as AR tests are typically based on the original text of the book, not the simplified versions like No Fear Shakespeare.
The No Fear Shakespeare series is intended as a simplified rewriting of Shakespeare's plays for those whose command of the English language is not up to dealing with the original. However, for someone with the lack of literacy displayed in the writing of this question, even the No Fear series may be beyond their comprehension.
No Fear Shakespeare is not a play - it is a translation of most of Shakespeare's Elizabethan works such as Macbeth, Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear and others into understandable, modern day English. An actual title of a play would be more helpful in finding types of betrayal.
common
The only result would be that the bones will be relocated. Shakespeare did have a morbid fear of being disturbed after burial, but I suspect he's over it. Out of respect, we should avoid disturbing his resting place, but if the need arises, we should move the bones (or whatever is left). We may even learn some interesting things! The inscription on his grave cover asks that anyone disturbing the grave should be cursed. Shakespeare probably didn't write that inscription, and the idea that he had a morbid fear of being disturbed is based exclusively on that inscription. Which means that it wasn't Shakespeare who had the morbid fear of being moved. I doubt that anyone takes the curse seriously, but in any event there is no way anyone is going to disturb a tourist mecca like Shakespeare's grave.
The No Fear Shakespeare book can be purchased at any local book store. It will cost about $15-$25, depending on if one wishes to have a soft or hard covered book. Hard covered books are more expensive.
trauma
Common noun
The noun fear is a common, abstract noun; a word for a thing that is not physical; fear is an emotional thing.A common noun is a word for any person, place, or thing. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Dr. Daniel Fear MD, Grants Pass, ORFear Lake, Ontario, CanadaFear Road, Wallace, NE'Cape Fear' (1962) starring Robert Mitchum; (1991) starring Robert De Niro
Any irrational fear - and it MUST be irrational - is a phobia and will have a long word ending in ~phobia as its medical term. A fear of snakes is not a phobia, it's perfectly proper to be afraid of snakes, but to be afraid of them in a place where they don't exist, or are most unlikely to be found, would be a phobia.
Isolophobia is the fear of solitude or being alone. Athazagoraphobia is the fear of being forgotton or ignored or forgetting.
"Out, damned spot!" from Shakespeare's "Macbeth" alludes to the fear and guilt that Lady Macbeth experiences. "Courage is not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it." - Nelson Mandela's quote alludes to the idea that fear can be overcome through bravery and determination.