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“The Fox and the Grapes”

  1. One of Aesop's fables . A fox tries many times to pluck some grapes that dangle invitingly over his head, but he cannot reach them. As he slinks away in disgust, he says, “Those grapes are probably sour anyway.”


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Notes

“Sour grapes” refers to things that people decide are not worth having only after they find they cannot have them.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

According to Aesop's fable The Fox and the Grapes, failure often has the direct opposite effect—persuading us to abandon our previous plan.

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At the beginning of Something Deeply Hidden, Sean Carroll cites the tale of the fox and the grapes from Aesop’s Fables.

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I took two more breaths and pretended I was hearing Momma reading to me about the Billy Goats Gruff or the Fox and the Grapes or the Dog That Saw His Reflection in the Water or some other story she’d checked out of the library.

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At Faversham, Kent, is one of the Fox and the Grapes; at Chester is the Fox and the Stork.

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Fables, such as "The Boy and the Wolf" or "The Fox and the Grapes," are excellent to begin with, because they contain the necessary qualities which make up a good short story.

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