Fable can be categorized as a noun and a verb.
Verb |
||
fable - To compose fables; hence, to write or speak fiction ; to write or utter what is not true. | ||
fable - To feign; to invent; to devise, and speak of, as true or real; to tell of falsely. | ||
Noun |
||
fable - a short moral story (often with animal characters) | ||
fable - a story about mythical or supernatural beings or events | ||
fable - a deliberately false or improbable account |
# | Sentence | ||
---|---|---|---|
1. | noun | The following passage is a quotation from a well-known fable. | |
2. | noun | The following passage was quoted from a well-known fable. | |
3. | noun | I regaled the devil; he gave me a fable. | |
4. | noun | Every fable ends up with a moral. | |
5. | noun | It's a fable. | |
6. | noun | Tom doesn't know the difference between a fable and a fairytale. | |
7. | noun | On another occasion they delighted themselves with listening to a dove cooing in the neighbouring wood, and upon Chloe inquiring what the bird meant by its note, Daphnis told her the well-known fable which is related to all who ask that question. | |
8. | noun | Daphnis and Chloe were delighted, but they regarded what they heard as a fable rather than as fact; and they inquired of Philetas, who and what this Love could be? Whether he was a boy or a bird? And what powers he could exert? | |
9. | noun | What's the difference between a fable and a fairytale? | |
10. | noun | This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch you! " | |
11. | noun | This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch!" | |
12. | noun | This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch you! " This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch!" | |
13. | noun | This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I am aware!" | |
14. | noun | "This one is yours, this one is mine and the other, we share it." This is what we would have said if we want to make lie the Kabyle fable of the couple of frogs when the male said: "This one is mine, this one is mine and the other, we share it", the day they decided to separate. | |
15. | noun | Who does not know the fable of the cicada and the ant? |
Sentence | |
---|---|
noun | |
The following passage is a quotation from a well-known fable. | |
The following passage was quoted from a well-known fable. | |
I regaled the devil; he gave me a fable. | |
Every fable ends up with a moral. | |
It's a fable. | |
Tom doesn't know the difference between a fable and a fairytale. | |
On another occasion they delighted themselves with listening to a dove cooing in the neighbouring wood, and upon Chloe inquiring what the bird meant by its note, Daphnis told her the well-known fable which is related to all who ask that question. | |
Daphnis and Chloe were delighted, but they regarded what they heard as a fable rather than as fact; and they inquired of Philetas, who and what this Love could be? Whether he was a boy or a bird? And what powers he could exert? | |
What's the difference between a fable and a fairytale? | |
This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch you! " | |
This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch!" | |
This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch you! " This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I watch!" | |
This is the fable of the goat saying to the jackal: "Even when I graze, I am aware!" | |
"This one is yours, this one is mine and the other, we share it." This is what we would have said if we want to make lie the Kabyle fable of the couple of frogs when the male said: "This one is mine, this one is mine and the other, we share it", the day they decided to separate. | |
Who does not know the fable of the cicada and the ant? |