No, it's a free service. You may have to pay for downloading it as an ebook or on an iphone app, but directly from the sparknotes.com website it's free.
shakespeare used 31534 words and we use over 60, 000
It depends on what you use: Direct TV, Dish Network, etc. Fear Net is on different channels for every one, or don't have it at all.
use unknown weapons and technology
He uses an allusion to allude to SHakespeare's Macbeth
Foreshadowing
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.
Shakespeare's father was forced to pay a fine for creating a midden right next to a neighbors house
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.
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.
"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.
Sorry, Shakespeare did not use that word.
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.
shakespeare used 31534 words and we use over 60, 000
Spark Notes Look for no fear Shakespeare, or something along the lines of that. This is the link: http://nfs.sparknotes.com/
It means "afraid." it's the same as "afraid" -- fear it's the same as "afraid of" -- fear Afeared is just another way to say "afraid."
The pattren of Shakespeare's sonnets is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.