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RFV discussion
Latest comment: 14 years ago6 comments4 people in discussion
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RfV for the common-noun sense "The moral (usually at or near the end) of a piece of literature or film." — Really? — Raifʻhār Doremítzwr ~ (U · T · C) ~ 15:47, 30 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
Here's something, but in quotation marks, and with a meaning more like "a story containing a moral" rather than "a moral":
2001, Keith Scott, The Moose That Roared: The Story of Jay Ward, Bill Scott, a Flying Squirrel, and a Talking Moose, page 152–3:
General Mills wanted a new cartoon element, so an additional 13 "Aesops" were commissioned,
Jenkyns explained, "I'd written an 'Aesop' about a cat and a hen who fall in love; NBC had script approval, I guess, and someone there told us this was tantamount to doing a story about interracial marriage. Anyway, Jay told them they were being ridiculous and that my script was funny. It went to air."
I did actually first see the term on TV Tropes. It could be specific to that site. Aside: Does "the Aesop of " merit a sense, or is that just a logical extension of the person Aesop? — lexicógrafa | háblame — 22:12, 30 November 2010 (UTC)Reply