Folk tales are stories transmitted orally within a given culture. Fairy Tales are somewhat of a sub-catagory of folk tales that include made up creatures such as dragons, ect. So the 3LP tale seems to fit the larger folk tale better than the sub-catagory of monsters and such, but could be both.
tell me one of the same between a fable and a fairy tale
No, it is a fairy tale
Three Little Pigs, Thumbelina and Tom Thumb are fairy tale characters. They begin with the letter T.
cos it is
The main difference between a fable and a fairy tale is that a fable typically teaches a moral lesson using animals as characters, while a fairy tale often involves magical elements and fantastical creatures in a fictional setting.
It is a fable or a type of folk tale
No, it is just a tall tale. Pigs do not talk or build houses for themselves. Wolves cannot talk and blow air with gale force. Real-life wolves, however, will eat real-life pigs if hungry enough to stalk and kill one.
The fairy tale you are referring to is likely "The Three Little Pigs," where three small pigs build houses out of straw, sticks, and bricks to protect themselves from the Big Bad Wolf. There are only three pigs in this story, not five.
If there are talking animals then it is a fable. If there are fairies then it is a fairy tale. So the gingerbread man is a fable Fables have a moral or lesson that is usually stated in the story. Not all fairy tales have fairies (Little Red Riding Hood) and there are some fairy tales with talking animals (The Ugly Duckling).
Yes. It is a fairy tale that shows the value of taking your time and doing things the right way instead of doing a hurried job so you can go play.
In the strict definitions of traditional literature, it would be a fable (a story with a moral lesson). All of the animal characters act like people, which teaches a lesson to be passed on through generations. It is a folk tale, not a fairy tale, because there is no magic. It can also be considered a "nursery rhyme tale" for the rhyming conversation of the Wolf and pigs when he wants them to let him eat them: Wolf: "Little pig, little pig, let me in." Pig: "Not by the hair of my chinny-chinny-chin." Wolf : Then I'll huff...and I'll puff... and I'll blow your house in!"
Besides, Latin is a different language than Spanish. The roots of Sapnish come from Latin.