Answer this question…
The lessons in a fable are stated directly, while the main argument of a satire is often disguised.
A fable states the moral or lesson directly, while a satire often disguises the main argument.
2.3.2 The lessons in a fable are stated directly, while the main argument of a satire is often disguised.
A fable states the moral or lesson directly, while a satire often disguises the main argument.
Satire is the form that is specifically designed to criticize an institution, person, or group through the use of humor, irony, or exaggeration.
No, you are a completely different person in fable 3.
In some ways it is, there is many specific changes from fable 2 to fable 3 fable 3 has a different story line, it has different interaction way , the way you change your clothes/weapons/buy new upgrades etc is different also. and there are new areas to explore, there are also new enemies to kill and more
cos it is
a plate of different fruits.
No
No, satire does not have to be funny. While humor is often a characteristic of satire, the primary goal is to criticize or ridicule human folly, vices, or social issues. Satire can take on different tones, including dark, biting, or ironic, and does not require humor to effectively convey its message.
HORATION SATIRE is playfully amusing and seeks to correct vice or foolishness with gentle laughter and understanding. JUVENALIAN SATIRE provokes a darker kind of laughter. It is often bitter and criticizes corruption or incompetence with scorn and outrage.
they could be the same thing with different names attached to different tales