Answer:
<u>In spite of</u> her beautiful voice, she didn't want to be a singer.
Answer:
We could change the language and adapt it to reflect the contemporary English we use nowadays. That would make the play more understandable, especially for the young people and wake up their interest for the theatre.
We could change the setting, that is, time and place of some plays and adapt it to contemporary surroundings, without changing the topic of the plays, as Shakespearean problems and inner struggles are still present in the 21st century, only in different ways.
For example, we could change characters' professions or some circumstances without changing the plot of the story. Or, perhaps, try to represent some contemporary family issues, by readapting Hamlet into a boy who is fighting against his stepfather.
You can find it in the front of a dictionary
According to Michael Meister's introduction to The Inferno, Dante's story still has a powerful effect on its readers hundreds of years after its creation because of C- it deals with the human struggle with good and evil found within every person, which is still a struggle today. The fight against evil has been a universal theme in literature and still today it relates with every and any person whether religious or not.
Michael Meister wrote the foreword to Dante´s inferno published in 2007. Meister, who is a priest, points out that the Dante´s vision is so powerful that it affects readers even today.