congratulations you just did! or if that does not suffice, then here is this little gem. I am so totally stoked that i purchased fable for $3.99! your language arts teacher couldn't do better! not enough for you? then try this on for size! Jimmy told Billie the fable about the tortoise and the hare, but Billie said that story is crap. he prefers Yertle the Turtle. Oh yeah your momma would be so proud!
this satory is a fable
The complete subject in this sentence is "A fable."
It is a fable, but you can use it to describe someone who is either a "city mouse" or a "country mouse" if you want to.
The genie in the fable pretended to foretell certain events. It is said that high winds foretell rain.
A Fable is a type of Genre. Characters and places in a fable may not be true. In a fable they try to teach the character a lesson.
What!!?! Are you really asking that!?! Of course you can use Live with Fable 2!
Start with your moral. A fable has to be written "backwards" because you need to know the end before you start writing. Then, just think of a way to explain that moral by telling a short story. Remember the examples of fables: the lion helped by the mouse, the fox with the grapes, or the dog who saw his reflection in the river. Your story should be along those lines -- show the reader about your moral instead of just saying the moral right off.First, you have to have a moral. Then, you have to write about an animal.
Sure! "The Tortoise and the Hare" is a famous fable about a slow-moving tortoise who wins a race against a fast but overconfident hare.
No
no
In the sentence "A kind merchant in a fable," "A kind merchant" is the subject. The subject is the noun or pronoun that performs the action of the verb in a sentence. In this case, the kind merchant is the one being described or talked about in the sentence, making it the subject.
It's a fable, a fairy tale, fiction. The idea is to instruct.