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Comparing Stories with Metaphorical Meaning PARABLE VS. _______
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Parable Parables teach moral and ethical lessons, but they only have human characters. They are set in the real world, with realistic problems and results. They often have spiritual aspects. So what would a story be that features a human interacting with a talking animal? A fable, since parables exclude unrealistic things like chatty foxes.
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Parable Examples Parable of the Sower - Matthew 13:3-8 Parable of the Weeds - Matthew 13:24-30 Parable of the Mustard Seed - Matthew 13:31-32 Parable of the Yeast - Matthew 13:33 Parable of the Hidden Treasure - Matthew 13:44 Parable of the Pearl - Matthew 13:45-46 Parable of the Fishing Net - Matthew 13:47-50 Parable of the Unmerciful Servant - Matthew 18:23-35 Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard - Matthew 20:1-16 Parable of the Two Sons - Matthew 21:28-32 Parable of the Tenants - Matthew 21:33-46 Parable of the Wedding Banquet - Matthew 22:1- 14 Wise and Faithful Servants - Matthew 24:45-51 Parable of the Ten Virgins - Matthew 25:1-13 Parable of the Talents - Matthew 25:14-30 Parable of the Growing Seed - Mark 4:26-29 Traveling Owner of the House - Mark 13:34-37 New Cloth on an Old Coat - Luke 5:36 New Wine in Old Wineskins - Luke 5:37-38 Wise and Foolish Builders - Luke 6:47-49 Forgiven Debts - Luke 7:36-50 Parable of the Good Samaritan - Luke 10:25-37 Friend at Midnight - Luke 11:5-10 Parable of the Rich Fool - Luke 12:16-21 Unfruitful Fig Tree - Luke 13:6-9 Jesus at a Pharisee’s House - Luke 14:7-11 Parable of the Great Banquet - Luke 14:16-24 Parable of the Lost Sheep - Luke 15:3-7 Parable of the Lost Coin - Luke 15:8-10 Parable of the Lost Son - Luke 15:11-32 Parable of the Shrewd Manager - Luke 16:1-12 Parable of the Persistent Widow - Luke 18: 1-8 Parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector - Luke 18:9-14 Parable of the Good Shepherd - John 10: 1-5 and 11-18
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Fable Fables are stories that feature animals, plants, or forces of nature that have been given human qualities. They teach moral and ethical lessons, like how to behave or how to treat people. Since the main characters are animals, they are a good way to introduce serious topics to children. Each animal represents a particular human fault or virtue, and what happens in the story is directly related to the animal’s personality
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Fable Examples The Ant and the Grasshopper - Aesop The Boy Who Cried Wolf - Aesop The Fox and the Crow - Aesop The Lion and the Mouse - Aesop The Tortoise and the Hare - Aesop The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse - Aesop Frog in a Milk Pail - Shows that the frog never gave up and eventually got out of the pail The Story of the Butterfly - Shows that sometimes we need struggles to grow The Crow and the Jar The Wolf and the House Dog The Maid and the Milk pail
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Fairy & Folk Tales Fairy Tales include mythical creatures, like elves, fairies, and trolls. They feature enchantments, spells, and magical items. They are meant primarily to amuse. Folk Tales are traditional stories from a particular culture. They are considered part of the history (imaginary or not) of that culture, and often they seek to explain why something is the way it is (why the seasons change, or why the leopard has spots).
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Fairy & Folk Tale Examples Beauty and the Beast - Gabrielle- Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve The Emperor's New Clothes - Hans Christian Andersen Cinderella Thumbelina Snow White and Rose Red Paul Bunyan The Nightingale The Seventh Sister How the Snake Got Poison Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves He Lion, Bruh Bear, and Bruh Rabbit
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Work Cited Coulter, Andrea, Vicki Wenderlich, and Ray Wenderlich. "Wild Fables." Wild Fables: The Difference Between a Fable and a Parable. Razeware LLC., 16 Mar. 2011. Web. 07 Nov. 2013.. LoveToKnow Corp. "Parable Examples." Your Dictionary. N.p., 1996. Web. 07 Nov. 2013. <http://examples.yourdictionary.com/ examples/parable-examples.html>.
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