What's the difference between aesopian and aesopic?

Aesopian


Definition:

Example Sentences:

Aesopic


Definition:

  • (a.) Alt. of Esopic

Example Sentences:

  • (1) As Aesop reminds us at the end of the fable: “Nobody believes a liar, even when he’s telling the truth.” When leaders choose only the facts that suit them, people don’t stop believing in facts – they stop believing in leaders This distrust is both mutual and longstanding, prompting two clear trends in British electoral politics.
  • (2) However at present, the only references have appeared in the ancient literature of Aesop and Grimm.
  • (3) The thing people often forget about Aesop’s fable of the boy who cried wolf is that in the end, there really was a wolf.
  • (4) The bed is wonderful and despite myself (because they aren't British-made) I love the plant-based Aesop toiletries.
  • (5) As in Aesop's adage, the ego ideal is at the source of the best and the worst of things.
  • (6) Named Aesop (Aetiology and Ethnicity in Schizophrenia and other Psychoses), the study involved 500 patients with mental health problems from various ethnic groups, comparing them with a control group of 350 healthy subjects.
  • (7) Achondroplasia is thought to have provided a model for the representation of a series of figures including the Egyptian god Bes, the Greek teller of fables Aesop, and the Renaissance giant of fiction Morgante.
  • (8) The current mainstream discourse presented by psychiatrists and academics articulated in the AESOP research project looking at mental illness within the Caribbean community was that you cannot blame mental health services for the over representation of black people as they are responding to the symptoms from society.
  • (9) These data are consistent with the predictions of a model of Pavlovian conditioning (AESOP, Wagner & Brandon, 1989) that distinguishes between emotive and sensory conditioning as did Konorski (1967).
  • (10) This satire is in the tradition of Aesop’s fables or St. Francis of Assisi when he preached to the birds – it’s a lovely little vignette.
  • (11) Aesop’s observation, that “we hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office”, remains true in spirit, though hanging has been replaced by community payback .

Words possibly related to "aesopian"

Words possibly related to "aesopic"