No it is called The fox and the grapes.
yes because a fable is called a fable it has a moral in it like the fox and the grapes:"People tend to despise that which they dont have" hope this helps BTW im eleven
Reynard
the fox and the crane
Aesop's Fable Foiling the Fox - 1950 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
The fox in the fable "The Fox and the Grapes" assumed that the grapes he couldn't reach were sour anyway.
it's a fable by aseop
The Fox was trying to get the cheese by flattering the Crow.
By definition a fable is a story with talking animals.Examples of early fables:The serpent talking to Eve in the Garden of Eden.The Greek fable of the fox and the grapes.
Prosopopoeia, or Mother Hubberds Tale
The fable "The Fox and the Grapes," which features the concept of sour grapes, is attributed to the ancient Greek storyteller Aesop. In the fable, a fox describes grapes he cannot reach as sour to console himself for not being able to obtain them.
Sly as in 'Sly as a fox' english idiomSwift as the Teumessian fox or Cadmean vixen, was a gigantic fox that was destined never to be caught.Haughty as in Aesop's fable 'The Fox and the Grapes'.
The average ovular dump of a female fox is 2-4 eggs.