Aesopish

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Aesop +‎ -ish.

Adjective[edit]

Aesopish (comparative more Aesopish, superlative most Aesopish)

  1. Characteristic of Aesop's animal fables; Aesopian
    • 1947, A History of Modern Drama, Ed. by Barrett H. Clark and George Freedley:
      The Lucky One (1919) came to the stage several years later and was somewhat more serious in tone, being a character study of two brothers, one brilliant, one dull; of course, the tortoise won the race for the hand of the girl they both wanted in typically Æsopish fashion.
    • 2002, Gaurav Sabnis, Vantage point:
      I am feeling a little Aesopish today and hence this story.
    • 2011, William Huffhine, Confessions of a Christian Dropout:
      It sounds rather Aesopish. Talking snakes, one bad apple ruining it all. I'm not so sure.

Alternative forms[edit]