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Which fable does the liar come from?

Liar is from Aesop's Fables.

1, it is said that there is a shepherd boy who goes out to herd sheep every day. One day, he was so bored that he wanted to have a good time. So he shouted, "The wolf is coming, the wolf is coming, and the wolf is going to eat the sheep." Hearing the tragic cry, the farmers quickly put down their work and picked up hoes and poles to fight wolves.

Who knows, at first glance, there are no wolves at all. This is a joke played by children. The farmers left angrily. The child was so happy that he couldn't help it. Later, he played tricks on farmers in the same way. The farmers criticized him, but he didn't repent, and his stomach ached with laughter. Then, one day, the wolf really came and ate all the sheep. No matter how he shouted, nobody paid attention to him.

Introduction to Aesop's Fables;

1, Aesop's Fables, formerly known as Esop's Tales Integration, is said to have been handed down by Aesop, an ancient Greek slave born in the 6th century BC, and later generations copied and edited according to the fables collected by Byzantine monk Planudes and the ancient Greek fables discovered one after another.

2. There are 357 Aesop's fables, most of which come from folk, including stories of ancient Greece, ancient India, Arabia and Christianity. Most of them are animals, which are used to compare powerful people in the world, expose their cruel nature, teach people the truth of life with short and pithy stories and reveal the truth contained in life.

3. Aesop's Fables is the earliest collection of fables in the world, one of the most widely circulated and influential classic works in the world, and a literary treasure in the history of world culture, with extraordinary ideological and artistic value.