fable: [13] The Indo-European base *bha- ‘speak’ has produced a wide range of English words, including (via Germanic) ban and (via Latin fārī ‘speak’) affable, confess, fairy, fame, fate, ineffable, infant, nefarious, and profess. Fable is a member of this latter group; it comes via Old French fable from Latin fābula ‘narrative, story’ (source also of English fabulous [15]), which was a derivative of fārī. Fib [17] is probably short for an earlier fible-fable ‘nonsense’, a fanciful reduplication of fable. => affable, ban, confess, fabulous, fairy, fame, fate, fib, ineffable, infant, nefarious, profess, prophet
fable (n.)
c. 1300, "falsehood, fictitious narrative; a lie, pretense," from Old French fable "story, fable, tale; drama, play, fiction; lie, falsehood" (12c.), from Latin fabula "story, story with a lesson, tale, narrative, account; the common talk, news," literally "that which is told," from fari "speak, tell," from PIE root *bha- (2) "speak" (see fame (n.)). Restricted sense of "animal story" (early 14c.) comes from Aesop. In modern folklore terms, defined as "a short, comic tale making a moral point about human nature, usually through animal characters behaving in human ways" ["Oxford Dictionary of English Folklore"].
雙語(yǔ)例句
1. The old fable continues to echo down the centuries.
這則古老的寓言流傳了數(shù)個(gè)世紀(jì)。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
2. Is reincarnation fact or fable?
轉(zhuǎn)世輪回是確有其事還是無(wú)稽之談?
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
3. a land rich in fable
寓言之鄉(xiāng)
來(lái)自《權(quán)威詞典》
4. The course is about fable and legend in modern literature.
這門(mén)課專(zhuān)講現(xiàn)代文學(xué)中的神話和傳奇作品.
來(lái)自《簡(jiǎn)明英漢詞典》
5. This fable was written after the manner of Aesop.