| 04Yegh2 8:177 | | | right to believe in that | fable— | which in your religion you |
| 04Yegh2 8:177 | | | we no longer believe in | fables | but are pupils of the |
| 06Khor1 3:13 | | | it superfluous to repeat the | fables | of pagans concerning the beginnings |
| 06Khor1 6:2 | | | change these true accounts into | fables | |
| 06Khor1 6:10 | | | He also said many other | fables | about him, which are inapposite |
| 06Khor1 6:16 | | | else considers these to be | fables | or whether he reckons them |
| 06Khor1 18:4 | | | Furthermore the | fables | of our own land confirm |
| 06Khor1 18:5 | | | But if you delight in | fables: “ | Semiramis turned into stone before |
| 06Khor1 32:7 | | | Tiran, Vahagn, of whom the | fables | of our land say: Heaven |
| 06Khor1 34:1 | | | From the | Fables | of the Persians Concerning Biurasp |
| 06Khor1 34:2 | | | in the obscene and ridiculous | fables | of Biurasp Azhdahak; and why |
| 06Khor1 34:5 | | | have you of these false | fables; | what use are these senseless |
| 06Khor1 34:6 | | | Surely, they are not Greek | fables, | noble and polished and meaningful |
| 06Khor1 34:25 | | | The one whom in their | fables | they call “the child of |
| 06Khor2 7:13 | | | I omit the nonsensical | fables | that are recounted in Hadamakert |
| 06Khor2 24:13 | | | ancient tales and old wives’ | fables, | putting ourselves out to be |
| 06Khor2 36:7 | | | They tell a | fable | about this to the effect |
| 06Khor2 42:11 | | | is either false and a | fable | or else he had some |
| 06Khor2 49:2 | | | the vishaps, according to the | fable - | that is, for the descendants |
| 06Khor2 50:11 | | | rehearse, as they sing their | fables, | in the following way: Noble |
| 06Khor2 50:15 | | | they also sing in their | fables | about the wedding: A shower |
| 06Khor2 51:10 | | | is called Argavan in the | fable, | and this is the cause |
| 06Khor2 52:2 | | | Smbat, for indeed, what the | fable | says is not very far |
| 06Khor2 54:6 | | | sing of this in their | fables, | they say a certain Domet |
| 06Khor2 61:4 | | | of Goḷt’n tell the following | fable. | At the death of Artashēs |
| 06Khor2 61:7 | | | time many smiths, following the | fable, | on the first day of |
| 06Khor2 61:10 | | | same singers express in the | fable | as follows: The descendants of |
| 06Khor2 65:4 | | | which they say in the | fables: | Vardgēs as a child left |
| 06Khor2 70:1 | | | What are the | fables | about the Pahlavik’ |
| 06Khor2 70:3 | | | out the nonsense of their | fables | |
| 06Khor2 70:4 | | | us now to repeat the | fables | concerning the dream of Papag |
| 06Khor2 73:3 | | | the Persians have composed myriad | fables | about him, to the effect |
| 08Ghev1 10:19 | | | a narrator of legends and | fables | |
| 10Tovma1 1:72 | | | here no further on their | fables. | It is not fire emerging |
| 10Tovma1 2:0 | | | and the Babylonians and their | fables | |
| 10Tovma1 2:2 | | | ago. Likewise, there are other | fables, | that a book was written |
| 10Tovma1 2:3 | | | in order to explain the | fables | |
| 10Tovma1 3:10 | | | obscure, he composed a new | fable | about himself in order once |
| 10Tovma1 3:32 | | | up other (tales) from these | fables | and similar motiveless stories according |
| 10Tovma1 10:49 | | | In this regard the poetic | fable | seems opportune to me, which |
| 10Tovma3 1:9 | | | Equally appropriate is the old | fable | of the philosopher Olympian concerning |
| 10Tovma3 7:25 | | | not follow the tellers of | fables | or walk the untrodden path |
| 10Tovma3 18:6 | | | village of Lezu, where the | fable | is told that Ara the |
| 10Tovma4 7:2 | | | from reports of others as | fables | elaborated from fictitious accounts; but |