Generally in fables there is a moral lesson to be learned.
The fables are called 'The Aesop Fables'. A weird name Aesop.
The moral to one of Aesop's fables. The Wolf and the Lamb to be exact.
Aesop was famous for writing down fables, traditionally called "Aesop's fables."
A fable is a type of story. Aesop's fables are the fables invented by the famed fabalist Aesop.
Kefu Ma has written: 'Dui niu tan qin' -- subject(s): Chinese Fables, Fables, Fables, Chinese 'He Shi bi' -- subject(s): Chinese Fables, Fables, Fables, Chinese
The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny...its from a Wolf and the lamb
Not always. A fable may have a moral, or it may not. Aesop's Fables usually had a moral.
The noun fables is a plural noun; pronouns for fables are they (subjective) and them (objective).
Aesop wrote many, many fables. These were moral stories that featured animal characters. Some examples include 'Country Mouse and City Mouse,' 'The Tortoise and the Hare,' and 'The Fox and the Crow.'
Fables mean animals, so the fables are all fiction here.
You can find 500-word fables in books of fables, online websites that specialize in fables or short stories, and in collections of short stories that feature fables as part of their content. Many literature websites and platforms also offer fables in various lengths, including 500 words.
This tale is adopted from the Aesop fables. Therefore the author is Aesop.