fable
English
Etymology
From Middle English, borrowed from Old French fable, from Latin fabula, from fā(rī) (“to speak, say”) + -bula (“instrumental suffix”). See ban, and compare fabulous, fame.
Pronunciation
- enPR: fā′bəl, IPA(key): /ˈfeɪbəl/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -eɪbəl
- Hyphenation: fa‧ble
Noun
fable (plural fables)
- A fictitious narrative intended to enforce some useful truth or precept, usually with animals, etc. as characters; an apologue. Prototypically, Aesop's Fables.
- Synonym: morality play
- Any story told to excite wonder; common talk; the theme of talk.
- 1 Timothy 4:7,
- Old wives' fables.
- 1842, Alfred Tennyson, The Gardener's Daughter; or, The Pictures:
- […] we grew / The fable of the city where we dwelt.
- Synonym: legend
- 1 Timothy 4:7,
- Fiction; untruth; falsehood.
- 1711, Joseph Addison, The Spectator, volume the fourth, no. 264:
- I say it wou'd look like a fable to report that this gentleman gives away all which is the overplus of a great fortune by secret methods, to other men.
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- The plot, story, or connected series of events forming the subject of an epic or dramatic poem.
- 1695, John Dryden, A Parallel betwixt Painting and Poetry:
- For the moral (as Bossu observes,) is the first business of the poet, as being the groundwork of his instruction. This being formed, he contrives such a design, or fable, as may be most suitable to the moral;
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Derived terms
- personal fable
- fabulist
Translations
fictitious narration to enforce some useful truth or precept
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story told to excite wonder
fiction, untruth, falsehood
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Verb
fable (third-person singular simple present fables, present participle fabling, simple past and past participle fabled)
- (intransitive, archaic) To compose fables; hence, to write or speak fiction; to write or utter what is not true.
- 1591, William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 1, Act IV, Scene 2,
- He fables not; I hear the enemy:
- Out, some light horsemen, and peruse their wings.
- 1706, Matthew Prior, “An Ode, Humbly Inscribed to the Queen,” stanza 17, in Samuel Johnson (editor), The Works of the English Poets, London, 1779, Volume 30, p. 254,
- Vain now the tales which fabling poets tell,
- That wavering Conquest still desires to rove!
- In Marlborough’s camp the goddess knows to dwell:
- Long as the hero’s life remains her love.
- 1852, Matthew Arnold, Empedocles on Etna, Act II, in Empedocles on Etna and Other Poems, London: B. Fellowes, p. 50,
- He fables, yet speaks truth.
- 1591, William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 1, Act IV, Scene 2,
- (transitive, archaic) To make up; to devise, and speak of, as true or real; to tell of falsely; to recount in the form of a fable.
- 1674, John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book VI, lines 288-292,
- […] err not, that so shall end
- The strife which thou callest evil, but we style
- The strife of glory; which we mean to win,
- Or turn this Heaven itself into the Hell
- Thou fablest […]
- 1691, Arthur Gorges (translator), The Wisdom of the Ancients by Francis Bacon (1609), London, “Cassandra, or, Divination,”
- The Poets Fable, That Apollo being enamoured of Cassandra, was by her many shifts and cunning slights still deluded in his Desire […]
- 1674, John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book VI, lines 288-292,
Derived terms
Translations
compose fables
Further reading
- fable in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
French
Etymology
From Old French fable, borrowed from Latin fabula.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /fabl/
Audio (file)
Further reading
- “fable” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Old French
Spanish
Verb
fable
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