How to use in-sentence of “tale”:
+ In the biography “Tchaikovsky”, writer David Brown points out that Tchaikovsky was not happy with “The Nutcracker” and complained to his friends about the difficulty of setting the tale to music.
+ She is famous for writing children’s books with animal characters such as “The Tale of Peter Rabbit”.
+ I noticed on A Tale of Two Cities that there were two wikiquote links.
+ With the exception of the Innkeeper/host Harry Bailey, the various manuscripts of The Canterbury Tales had various drawings of each of the Pilgrims who told a tale; other Pilgrims mentioned who did not tell a tale or who were illustrated were the knight’s yeoman, a haberdasher, a carpenter, a weaver, a dyer, a tapestry weaver; a plowman.
+ The story is based on the tale of Endymion from Greek mythology.
+ The tale of her being abducted by Hades, during which she was tricked into eating seeds from a pomegranate, served to explain the cause of the seasons, and is one prominently featured in ancient Greek literature.
Example sentences of “tale”:
+ On 16 December 1901, the first 460 copies of her privately printed “The Tale of Peter Rabbit” were given out to her family and friends.
+ The opera is based on the 1697 French fairy tale “Bluebeard” by Charles Perrault.
+ One of the four classics of Chinese literature, it tells the tale of Tang Dynasty monk Chen Hui’s epic pilgrimage with three other traveling companions.
+ The narrative of Bel is a folk tale ridiculing worship.
+ The Olonkho is a famous Yakut tale about great people and animals.
+ It is a bittersweet tale of two pairs of siblings – Abir-Drishti and Subho-Antara, the show encapsulates their intertwined destinies as Drishti and Subho cross paths time and again leading to series of explosive coincidences and happenstances.
+ Ali Baba is a fictional character, who is described in the adventure tale of “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves”.
+ On 16 December 1901, the first 460 copies of her privately printed "The Tale of Peter Rabbit" were given out to her family and friends.
+ The opera is based on the 1697 French fairy tale "Bluebeard" by Charles Perrault.
+ The host asks the Pardoner to tell a happy story after the sad tale that the Franklin told.
+ It is only performed by experts who have learn the tale thoroughly.
+ The descriptions of Ash in the manga “The Electric Tale of Pikachu”, “Pocket Monster Zensho”, and “Ash Pikachu”, are much like in the anime.
+ The Robert Louis Stevenson tale is used as a backstory within the series.
+ In “The Electric Tale of Pikachu”, it is based on Ash’s journey up until the end of the Orange Islands travel.
More in-sentence examples of “tale”:
+ Vaccines and autism: a tale of shifting hypotheses.
+ Fairy tale and folklore researchers Iona and Peter Opie have written that “Thumbelina” is an adventure story from the female point of view.
+ The story is a tale of murder and ghostly revenge.
+ Called “pretty, witty Nell” by Samuel Pepys, she has been called a living embodiment of the spirit of English RestorationRestoration England and has come to be considered a folk heroine, with a story echoing the rags-to-royalty tale of Cinderella.
+ Raymond Bernard’s silent movie, “The Chess Player uses the story of the Turk in an adventure tale set during the Partitions of Poland in 1772.
+ A fairy tale is a story with a plot involving fairies.
+ A movie about the folk tale titled “The Curse of La Llorona” was released in April 2019.
+ Charles Boner also translated the tale in 1846 as “Little Ellie”.
+ He believed the traditional fairy tale production was impossible to present on the modern stage.
+ Based on the tale “Little Bear Bongo” by Sinclair Lewis, “Bongo” tells the story of a circus bear cub named Bongo who longs for freedom from captivity.
+ They are a family of white, roundish fairy tale characters with large snouts that make them look like hippopotamuses.
+ The short tells the tale of a boy whose girlfriend’s sexual fantasy is to have sex in a bathtub filled with strawberry jam.
+ A tale from Gianfrancesco Straparola’s “Le piacevoli notti” are similar to “Puss in Boots”.
+ Hoffmann’s hallucinatory, erotic tale “Meister Floh”.
+ The other people object to this and hope that he will tell a tale that is rich in morals.
+ It was based on Charles Perrault’s 1697 fairy tale “The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood”.
+ Chulsu reads a fairy tale book to Suni which they promised to read together 47 years ago.
+ When she was around 30, Potter published “The Tale of Peter Rabbit”.
+ Jacqueline Banerjee views the tale as a story about failure.
+ The American term “Gilded Age” was coined by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner in their book, “The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today” In Empire of BrazilBrazil, it started with the end of the Paraguayan War.
+ Takahata’s most recent movie is “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya”.
+ Eamonn returns from the chase and tells the tale of how Naimh slips on the rocks and fell into the bog and died.
+ A Disney Movie loosely based on Squanto’s Life: Squanto: A Warrior’s Tale was released a year before Pocahontas.
+ Beatrix Potter’s “The Tale of Peter Rabbit” was published in 1902.
+ The fairy tale atmosphere in the story is also an idea that he uses in his later operas which deal with fantasy stories.
+ Erasums is thought to have made the error when he translated Hesiod’s tale of Pandora into Latin.
+ King Jamshid is featured prominently in one apocryphal tale associated with the history of wine and its discovery.
+ Andersen’s manuscript was at the printer’s when he suddenly changed the original climax of the tale from the emperor’s subjects admiring his invisible clothes to that of the child’s cry.
+ Several changes were made to Hoffmann’s dark fairy tale when it was adapted to the bright and gay “Coppélia”.
+ In Giovanni BoccaccioBoccaccio’s “Decameron” a memorably morbid tale tells of Lisabetta, whose brothers slay her lover.
+ This tale was probably tweaked by Tchaikovsky and his friends during the ballet’s early discussion stages.
+ It is based on a fairy tale by Madame Leprince de Beaumont, and the 1991 Disney animated movie, “Beauty and the Beast”.
+ He may have been the inspiration for the 1697 fairy tale “Bluebeard” by Charles Perrault.
+ The vampire tale is virtually absent in Romanian culture.
+ The tale is of interest because it was known to the New England Puritan divine, Cotton Mather.
+ Carole Scott, a literary scholar and critic, wrote in her essay “An Unusual Hero: Perspective and Point of View in “The Tale of Peter Rabbit”” that she thought Potter’s story was about a naughty hero with a proper moral at the end.
+ She sees parallels between Andersen’s tale and the Greek myth of Demeter and her daughter, Persephone.
+ It is thanks to his suggestions that many great Russian operas were composed: Borodin’s Prince Igor, Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov, Rimsky-Korsakov’s The Tale of Tsar Saltan, Sadko and The Maid of Pskov and Tchaikovsky’s The Tempest and Manfred.
+ Boccaccio’s tale is the source of John Keats’ poem “Isabella or The Pot of Basil”.
+ The Australian Broadcasting Corporation, commenting on the series being part of their 2008 line-up, said “This classic horror tale has been given a modern make-over that will leave you on the edge of your seat and begging for more.
+ Fairy tale and folklore researchers Iona and Peter Opie believe that “Thumbelina” is a “distant tribute” to Andersen’s friend, Henriette Wulff, the small, delicate, handicapped daughter of the Danish translator of Shakespeare.
+ He picked Hoffmann’s 1816 fairy tale “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King” as the subject for the new ballet.
+ Hoffmann’s 1816 fairy tale “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King”.
+ These new Zords are mostly fairy tale animals, like the unicorn and the dragon.
+ Coronet “Faerie Tale Theatre” made a television version in 1984.
+ The story comes from a tale by the famous Russian poet Pushkin.
+ The Knight’s Tale is the first story of the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer.
+ Vaccines and autism: a tale of shifting hypotheses.
+ Fairy tale and folklore researchers Iona and Peter Opie have written that "Thumbelina" is an adventure story from the female point of view.