Question

What is a fable?


Answers (3)

by Becky 9 years ago

I have a feeling good point out i love how you tied the lessons to the fables, it makes that much more impact, and makes it memorable too! uk dissertation help

by Becky 9 years ago

I have a feeling good point out i love how you tied the lessons to the fables, it makes that much more impact, and makes it memorable too! uk dissertation help at

by Jean Johnson 10 years ago

A fable is a story that uses animals and has a moral to it. A moral is to teach a good lesson in the story. The most famous collection of fables are Aesop's fables.
You may have heard of "the tortoise and the hare", 'the boy who cried wolf' and the 'wolf in the sheep's coating" as I child. A fable is way to give children good teachings because they are fun and simple stories which you are guaranteed to remember.


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by Lucy 11 years ago

A fable is a story, often about animals, usually with some special meaning or moral that we should be able to learn a lesson from. Probably the most famous examples are Aesop's Fables. Aesop was a Greek slave in the 5th or 6th century BC, and is supposed to be the author of a number of stories that are still very well known today, such as the Tortoise and the Hare, the Fox without a Brush, the Boy Who Cried Wolf and hundreds of others.
For example, in the first mentioned of these fables, a tortoise and a hare started to run a race. Of course the hare was winning easily, but because he was so far ahead he decided to take a rest and finish the race later. While he was asleep, the tortoise just kept slowly going and in the end finished the race first. The moral is that the fastest or most obvious winner doesn't always come first; and that if you keep going you will often succeed.


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