to not be greedy
The lesson in this fable is to be cautious of those who may deceive you with false promises or flattery. It teaches us to be aware of manipulative individuals and to trust our instincts when something seems too good to be true.
A moral in a fable is the lesson or message that the story is designed to teach. It is often a principle or value that is meant to guide behavior or inspire reflection in the reader. Fables typically use animals or inanimate objects to illustrate these morals in a simple and engaging way.
a folk tale teaches a lesson indirectly.
The purpose of fable is to teach the reader a lesson.
No, it is a story with a moral or lesson to learn from reading the fable.
That term is "moral." It is the lesson or message that is conveyed in a fable through a wise saying or statement at the end of the story.
The moral of "The Donkey and the Lapdog'" fable is that you should be happy with your skills and lot in life. In the fable, the donkey attempts to act like a lapdog because he is jealous of the lapdog's life, but it backfires because he is a donkey and not a dog. As a donkey, he learns he is best suited for field work and should stick to that.
well there is a dog on fable 3 and 2 but it would not be the same dog but may have the same ability's.
The Aesop fable are usually animal stories which are thre to teach us a lesson.
The lesson learned at the end of a fable is often referred to as the moral or the moral lesson. It is a concise and explicit message or value that the story intends to convey to the reader or listener.
Not to gossip or believe it
To not judge people on how they are & look.