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Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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7 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
fa·ble
/ˈfebəl/
寓言,神話,謊言(
vi
.)虛構,作寓言
From:
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
fable
fable
語言
FABLE
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Fa·ble
n.
1.
A
Feigned
story
or
tale
,
intended
to
instruct
or
amuse
;
a
fictitious
narration
intended
to
enforce
some
useful
truth
or
precept
;
an
apologue
.
See
the
Note
under
Apologue
.
Jotham's
fable
of
the
trees
is
the
oldest
extant
.
--
Addison
.
2.
The
plot
,
story
,
or
connected
series
of
events
,
forming
the
subject
of
an
epic
or
dramatic
poem
.
The
moral
is
the
first
business
of
the
poet
;
this
being
formed
,
he
contrives
such
a
design
or
fable
as
may
be
most
suitable
to
the
moral
.
--
Dryden
.
3.
Any
story
told
to
excite
wonder
;
common
talk
;
the
theme
of
talk
.
“Old
wives
'
fables
. ”
We
grew
The
fable
of
the
city
where
we
dwelt
. --
Tennyson
.
4.
Fiction
;
untruth
;
falsehood
.
It
would
look
like
a
fable
to
report
that
this
gentleman
gives
away
a
great
fortune
by
secret
methods
.
--
Addison
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Fa·ble
,
v. i.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Fabled
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Fabling
]
To
compose
fables
;
hence
,
to
write
or
speak
fiction
;
to
write
or
utter
what
is
not
true
.
“He
Fables
not.”
Vain
now
the
tales
which
fabling
poets
tell
.
--
Prior
.
He
fables
,
yet
speaks
truth
.
--
M
.
Arnold
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Fa·ble
,
v. t.
To
feign
;
to
invent
;
to
devise
,
and
speak
of
,
as
true
or
real
;
to
tell
of
falsely
.
The
hell
thou
fablest
.
--
Milton
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
fable
n
1:
a
deliberately
false
or
improbable
account
[
syn
:
fabrication
,
fiction
]
2:
a
short
moral
story
(
often
with
animal
characters
) [
syn
:
parable
,
allegory
,
apologue
]
3:
a
story
about
mythical
or
supernatural
beings
or
events
[
syn
:
legend
]
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Fable
applied
in
the
New
Testament
to
the
traditions
and
speculations
,
"
cunningly
devised
fables
",
of
the
Jews
on
religious
questions
(1
Tim
. 1:4; 4:7; 2
Tim
. 4:4;
Titus
1:14; 2
Pet
. 1:16).
In
such
passages
the
word
means
anything
false
and
unreal
.
But
the
word
is
used
as
almost
equivalent
to
parable
.
Thus
we
have
(1)
the
fable
of
Jotham
,
in
which
the
trees
are
spoken
of
as
choosing
a
king
(
Judg
. 9:8-15);
and
(2)
that
of
the
cedars
of
Lebanon
and
the
thistle
as
Jehoash's
answer
to
Amaziah
(2
Kings
14:9).
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