FABLES - translation to arabic
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

FABLES - translation to arabic

SHORT FICTIONAL STORY THAT OFTEN ANTHROPOMORPHISES NON-HUMANS TO ILLUSTRATE A MORAL LESSON
Fables; Fabulist; Fabulists; Balverines (Fable); History of fables; African fables
  • 1120 [[BCE]]}}
  • website=lib.ugent.be}}</ref>

FABLES         

ألاسم

خُزَعْبَلات

FABLE         

ألاسم

خُزَعْبَلات

fable         
N
خرافة خرافة ذات مغزى= كذب ، بهتان
VT
يلفق ، يختلق

Definition

fable
(fables)
1.
A fable is a story which teaches a moral lesson. Fables sometimes have animals as the main characters.
...the fable of the tortoise and the hare...
Each tale has the timeless quality of fable.
N-VAR
2.
You can describe a statement or explanation that is untrue but that many people believe as fable.
Is reincarnation fact or fable?
...little-known horticultural facts and fables.
= myth
N-VAR

Wikipedia

Fable

Fable is a literary genre: a succinct fictional story, in prose or verse, that features animals, legendary creatures, plants, inanimate objects, or forces of nature that are anthropomorphized, and that illustrates or leads to a particular moral lesson (a "moral"), which may at the end be added explicitly as a concise maxim or saying.

A fable differs from a parable in that the latter excludes animals, plants, inanimate objects, and forces of nature as actors that assume speech or other powers of humankind. Conversely, an animal tale specifically includes talking animals as characters.

Usage has not always been so clearly distinguished. In the King James Version of the New Testament, "μῦθος" ("mythos") was rendered by the translators as "fable" in the First Epistle to Timothy, the Second Epistle to Timothy, the Epistle to Titus and the First Epistle of Peter.

A person who writes fables is a fabulist.

Examples of use of FABLES
1. For example, the Panchatantra the Indian fables which inspired Aesops Fables can be turned into an interesting children‘s film as well.
2. His movies are fables of exaggerated innocence, existing in a world of their own.
3. January 1' 2006 02:00 Pension funds are facing the same torment as the luckless Sisyphus from the Greek fables.
4. January 18 2006 21:30 Pension funds are facing the same torment as the luckless Sisyphus from the Greek fables.
5. Newly published in the US and available here at the click of a mouse, they‘re tart, shimmering fables of passion.