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.
The reasoning of why shouldn’t be completely answered with a time frame
Answer:
"Isn't there something wrong when shipping jobs overseas has become so commonplace that we're able to write sitcoms about it..." (paragraph 17)
"Unless we take drastic steps to stop the job-killers, they may very well ship the rest of our jobs overseas..." (paragraph 20)
Explanation:
The author uses pathos (appeal to emotion) to support his arguments in Passage 3 by asking the engaging question of something going wrong with people being comfortable with talking about shipping jobs overseas on sitcoms and appealing to emotion by suggesting that unless drastic action is taken, more jobs will be shipped abroad.
Answer:
Non polarity and polarity.
Explanation: