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parable
/ ˈpærəbəl, pəˈræbəlɪst /
noun
a short story that uses familiar events to illustrate a religious or ethical point
any of the stories of this kind told by Jesus Christ
Other Word Forms
- parabolist noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of parable1
Compare Meanings
How does parable compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
Example Sentences
Much of “Flour” is concerned with the woman’s conversation with her driver about a parable from the apocryphal Gospel of Thomas that he is translating from Coptic—a tale, he says, about emptiness and unknowing.
It stands as a parable of modernism and its reception.
But this is a parable about the perils of public ownership of the means of producing anything, especially news.
Mr. Bottum’s use of a reference in a parable to prove a specific doctrine is also exegetically wooden, failing to acknowledge the nature of that genre.
Liberals are spinning the cartoonist’s plight as a parable of America’s horrific private medical system.
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