fabulist$511717$ - определение. Что такое fabulist$511717$
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Что (кто) такое fabulist$511717$ - определение

ANCIENT ROMAN POET
Avionnet; Avienus (fabulist)
  • 10th-century manuscript of Avianus' fables: The Frog Physician and [[The Mischievous Dog]]

fable         
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SHORT FICTIONAL STORY THAT OFTEN ANTHROPOMORPHISES NON-HUMANS TO ILLUSTRATE A MORAL LESSON
Fables; Fabulist; Fabulists; Balverines (Fable); History of fables; African fables
(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
Fable         
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SHORT FICTIONAL STORY THAT OFTEN ANTHROPOMORPHISES NON-HUMANS TO ILLUSTRATE A MORAL LESSON
Fables; Fabulist; Fabulists; Balverines (Fable); History of fables; African fables
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.
fable         
  • website=lib.ugent.be}}</ref>
SHORT FICTIONAL STORY THAT OFTEN ANTHROPOMORPHISES NON-HUMANS TO ILLUSTRATE A MORAL LESSON
Fables; Fabulist; Fabulists; Balverines (Fable); History of fables; African fables
I. n.
1.
Story (fictitious), tale, parable, apologue, allegory, myth, legend.
2.
Plot, action, series of events.
3.
Fiction, falsehood, lie, untruth, forgery, invention, fabrication, figment, coinage of the brain.
II. v. n.
Tell fables, make fables, fabricate tales, write fiction.
III. v. a.
Feign, invent, fabricate.

Википедия

Avianus

Avianus (or possibly Avienus; c. AD 400) a Latin writer of fables, identified as a pagan.

The 42 fables which bear his name are dedicated to a certain Theodosius, whose learning is spoken of in most flattering terms. He may possibly be Macrobius Ambrosius Theodosius, the author of Saturnalia; some think he may be the emperor of that name. Nearly all the fables are to be found in Babrius, who was probably Avianus's source of inspiration, but as Babrius wrote in Greek, and Avianus speaks of having made an elegiac version from a rough Latin copy, probably a prose paraphrase, he was not indebted to the original. The language and metre are on the whole correct, in spite of deviations from classical usage, chiefly in the management of the pentameter. The fables soon became popular as a school-book. Promythia and epimythia (introductions and morals), paraphrases, and imitations were frequent, such as the Novus Avianus of Alexander Neckam (12th century).