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> Tales about Cockerels and Cockerel

This section presents a collection of fairy tales about Cockerels in Russian. Enjoy reading!

    Once upon a time there was a cockerel and a hen. The cockerel was in a hurry, still in a hurry, and the hen kept saying to herself: “Petya, don’t rush.” Petya, take your time. Once a cockerel was pecking bean seeds, but in a hurry he choked. He choked, couldn’t breathe, couldn’t hear, as if he was lying dead. The chicken got scared and rushed to the owner...

    The cockerel was rummaging in the yard and found a bean seed. I wanted to swallow it, but I choked. He choked and fell, and lies there, not breathing! The chicken saw it, ran up to him and asked: - Ko-ko-ko! Cockerel-cockerel, why are you lying there and not breathing? The rooster answers: - I choked on bobok... Go to the cow, ask for butter - bobok...

    Once upon a time there was a cat, a thrush and a cockerel - a golden comb. They lived in the forest, in a hut. The cat and the blackbird go into the forest to chop wood, and leave the cockerel alone. When they leave, they are severely punished: “We will go far, but you stay to be a housekeeper and don’t raise your voice; when the fox comes, don’t look out the window. The fox visited...

    Once upon a time there lived an old man and an old woman. One day they were eating peas and dropped one pea on the floor. The pea rolled across the floor and rolled into the underground. The pea lay there for a long time or for a short time, but suddenly it began to grow. It grew and grew and grew to the floor. The old woman saw and said: “Old man, we need to cut through the floor: ...

    Grandmother and grandfather lived. And they had a rooster and a hen. One day my grandmother and grandfather quarreled. And the grandmother says to the grandfather: “Grandfather, take the rooster for yourself, and give me the chicken.” Here is a grandfather living with a rooster, and they have nothing to eat. And it’s good for the grandmother with the chicken, the chicken lays eggs. The grandfather says to the rooster: “Cockerel, cockerel! Although I don’t want to...

    Once upon a time there lived a cat and a cockerel. We lived well, together. The cat went hunting, and the cockerel cooked dinner, swept the hut, and sang songs. One day the cat went hunting, and the cockerel locked the door behind him and began to cook dinner. The fox was running, saw the hut and went to the window: “Hey, who’s the boss here?” “I am,” says the cockerel. - Let me into the hut. ...

    There lived a grandfather and a woman, and they had a chicken and a cockerel. Grandfather and grandmother died, and the cockerel and chicken ate everything without them - beans and everything else. They sat on the perch. Cockerel: “Crow!” - he grabbed a pebble and choked. So the chicken cried and cried, then ran to the sea to ask for water: - Sea, sea, give me water! ...

    There lived a cockerel with a hen. The cockerel got drunk and got his trousers dirty. The chicken went to wash in the river. She washed it and washed it, and the lump on her forehead flew out of her trousers. She ran home, the cockerel was lying on the stove. “Cockerel, what do you know?” - “What should I know?” - he says. “Ah,” he says, “the Germans have come to Rus'!”...

    Once upon a time there lived a cat and a rooster and they became brothers. The cat needed to go for firewood, so he said to the cockerel: “You, cockerel, sit on the stove and eat rolls, and I’ll go for firewood, and the fox will come, then don’t respond.” Gone. A fox came running and began to lure the cockerel out of the hut: - Brother cockerel, open up! Brother cockerel...

    Let's send the cockerel and the chicken to the nuts. The cockerel climbed onto the hazel tree, to the very top, and the chicken stood below, waiting. The cockerel picked one nut and threw it on the ground, picked another and threw it, and when he threw the third one, it hit the chicken right in the eye. - What a sin! - the cockerel was upset. - How did I miss so much? A...

    Once upon a time there was a cockerel and a hen, they lived, did not grieve, they cooked porridge. But something bad had to happen: one day a chicken fell into a pot of porridge. The cockerel pulled it out, hung it outside to dry, and began cooking the porridge again. A fox ran past and dragged away a chicken. The cockerel saw this through the window and harnessed six white...

    A long time ago, when the camel was a barker, and the flea was a barber, so long ago that I don’t even remember whether it was in a sieve or in straw, when I took my uncle’s cradle - creaking, creaking! - I rocked, and this is where the fairy tale begins. Once upon a time there lived a pockmarked cockerel. What worries does the rooster have? Whether red-haired, pockmarked, sleek, or...

  • A cockerel walks around the yard: there is a red comb on his head, and a red beard under his nose. Petya’s nose is a chisel, Petya’s tail is a wheel, there are patterns on his tail, and spurs on his legs. With his paws, Petya rakes the pile, calls the hens and chicks together: “Crested hens!” Busy hostesses! Motley-pockmarked! Little black and white! ...

  • Once upon a time there lived an old man and an old woman, poor, poor! They didn't have any bread. So they went to the forest, picked up acorns, brought them home and started eating. Whether they ate for a long time or for a short time, only the old woman dropped one acorn into the underground. The acorn sprouted and in a short time grew to the floor. The old woman noticed and said: ...

    Once upon a time there lived a fox and a hare in the forest. They lived not far from each other. Autumn came. It became cold in the forest. They decided to build huts for the winter. The fox built herself a hut out of loose snow, and the bunny built herself out of loose sand. They spent the winter in new huts. Spring has come, the sun has warmed up. Chanterelles-on...

    There lived a grandfather and a woman. And they had daughters - a grandfather's daughter and a woman's daughter. The grandfather's daughter's name was Galya, and the grandmother's name was Yulia. The woman loved and cared for her own daughter, but she kept her grandfather’s daughter in a black body, and kept trying to extricate her from the world. Once my grandfather went to the fair and bought a third-grade bull. He brought it home and said to his daughters: “You will...

    Once upon a time there lived a hen and a rooster. The hen laid eggs, and the cockerel got grains and treated the hen. He scoops a grain out of the hole and calls the chicken; - Co-co-co, Corydalis, I found a grain! Just once the cockerel raked out a big bob. “Well,” he thinks, “the chicken can’t swallow this grain, I’ll probably eat it myself.” Swallowed...

  • Somewhere, in the distant kingdom, in the thirtieth kingdom, there lived the glorious king Dadon. From a young age he was formidable, And every now and then he boldly inflicted insults on his neighbors, But in his old age he wanted to take a break from military affairs and arrange peace for himself; Here the neighbors began to bother the old king, doing terrible harm to him. So that your ends...

  • Beat the drum: ta-ta! tra-ta-ta! Play, pipes: work! tu-ru-ru!.. Let's get all the music here, - today is Vanka's birthday!.. Dear guests, you are welcome... Hey, everyone get here! Tra-ta-ta! Tru-ru-ru! Vanka walks around in a red shirt and says: “Brothers, you are welcome... As many treats as you like.” ...

  • One widow had a daughter, and she also had a stepdaughter. The stepdaughter is diligent and beautiful, but the daughter has a bad face and a terrible lazy person. The widow loved her daughter very much and forgave her everything, but she forced her stepdaughter to work a lot and fed her very poorly. Every morning the stepdaughter had to sit at the well and spin...

About the fairy tale

Russian folk tale is part cultural heritage nation. Children of all ages need to read fairy tales. Through children's fairy tales, a child will be able to get acquainted with the beauty of the great and mighty Russian language. Through getting to know fairy-tale characters the little listener (reader) gradually enters the world of relationships between people.

A good example of a relationship is the fairy tale “The Cockerel is the Golden Comb.” Heroes of this fairy tale story- representatives of the animal world. However, all the events occurring in a fairy tale can always be associated with real life. All relationships between fairy-tale characters can be considered as an example of relationships between people.

So, in one magical fairy-tale forest, three bosom friends lived and lived: a cat, a blackbird and a cockerel - a golden comb. The cat and the blackbird were busy with their daily work. Every day the friends went into the forest to get firewood. Cockerel, as the youngest, was left at home, in the hut, to manage the housework. And they always sternly warned him that he must sit quietly in the hut and not look out the window. And if a cheating fox appears, then don’t even vote.

Everything that the cat and the blackbird feared happened to the cockerel on the very first day when they went out to collect firewood. The sly fox learned that the cat and blackbird would not be at home. She came to her friends’ house and began in a gentle voice to persuade the cockerel to look out the window. She promised to give him peas. He leaned out the window. The red-haired cheat grabbed her prey and dragged her to her home.

The cockerel got scared and began loudly calling his friends for help. The cat and the blackbird heard calls for help. They ran and saved their naughty comrade. On the second day they began to gather in the forest thicket for firewood. And again they warned the cockerel not to listen to the sly fox. The cockerel would be glad to listen to his friends. But the red-haired cheat again outwitted the cockerel. Once again the cat and the thrush came to the rescue of their feathered friend.

On the third day everything happened again. The cat and the thrush went into the forest to get firewood. The cockerel was given strict orders not to listen to the fox's entreaties. The cockerel promised his older comrades to sit quietly and not lean out of the window. But natural curiosity defeated caution and prudence. The fox came and again lured the cockerel out with deception and temptation. He looked out the window and the red-haired beast, clutching him tightly, dragged him towards her home.

In vain the cockerel called for help from his faithful friends. They were very far from home and did not hear him. For the third time, the cat and the blackbird had to save their foolish friend. They rushed in the footsteps of the red-haired thief and found her hole. They gave her good blows. The cat tore it with its claws, and the blackbird pecked at it painfully. They took the cockerel and all went home together.

This tale can serve as a good example of what happens to naughty children when they do not listen to their elders. And also in the content of this story there is an example of true friendship and mutual assistance. It was the friends who came to the aid of the cockerel in difficult times.

The full text of the fairy tale for children, written in large print, can be read below.

Read the Russian folk tale “The Cockerel is the Golden Comb” for free online and without registration on our website.

Once upon a time there was a cat, a thrush and a cockerel - a golden comb. They lived in the forest, in a hut. The cat and the blackbird go into the forest to chop wood, and leave the cockerel alone.

If they leave, they are severely punished:

We will go far, but you stay housekeeper and don’t raise your voice; when the fox comes, don't look out the window.

The fox found out that the cat and thrush were not at home, ran to the hut, sat under the window and sang:

Cockerel, cockerel,

golden comb,

Oil head,

Silk beard,

Look out the window

I'll give you some peas.

The cockerel put his head out the window. The fox grabbed him in her claws and carried him to her hole.

The cockerel crowed:

The fox is carrying me

For the dark forests,

For fast rivers,

For the high mountains...

Cat and blackbird, save me!..

The cat and the blackbird heard it, gave chase and took the cockerel from the fox.

Another time, the cat and the blackbird went into the forest to chop wood and again punished:

Well, now, rooster, don’t look out the window, we’ll go even further, we won’t hear your voice.

They left, and the fox again ran to the hut and sang:

Cockerel, cockerel,

golden comb,

Oil head,

Silk beard,

Look out the window

I'll give you some peas.

The boys were running

The wheat was scattered

The chickens are pecking

Roosters are not given...

Ko-ko-ko! How can they not give it?!

The fox grabbed him in her claws and carried him to her hole.

The cockerel crowed:

The fox is carrying me

For the dark forests,

For fast rivers,

For the high mountains...

Cat and blackbird, save me!..

The cat and the blackbird heard it and rushed in pursuit. The cat is running, the blackbird is flying... They caught up with the fox - the cat is fighting, the blackbird is pecking, and the cockerel is taken away.

Whether long or short, the cat and the blackbird gathered again in the forest to chop wood. When leaving, they strictly punish the cockerel:

Don’t listen to the fox, don’t look out the window, we’ll go even further and won’t hear your voice.

And the cat and the blackbird went far into the forest to chop wood. And the fox is right there: he sat under the window and sings:

Cockerel, cockerel,

golden comb,

Oil head,

Silk beard,

Look out the window

I'll give you some peas.

The cockerel sits and says nothing. And the fox again:

The boys were running

The wheat was scattered

The chickens are pecking

Roosters are not given...

The cockerel keeps silent. And the fox again:

People were running

Nuts were poured

The chickens are pecking

Roosters are not given...

The cockerel put his head out the window:

Ko-ko-ko! How can they not give it?!

The fox grabbed him tightly in her claws, carried him into her hole, beyond the dark forests, beyond the fast rivers, beyond the high mountains... No matter how much the cockerel screamed or called, the cat and the blackbird did not hear him. And when we returned home, the cockerel was gone.

The cat and the blackbird ran along the fox's tracks. The cat is running, the blackbird is flying...

We ran to the fox's hole. The cat set up the caterpillars and let’s practice:

Ringing, rattling, harpers,

Golden strings...

Is Lisafya-kuma still at home?

Are you in your warm nest?

The fox listened, listened and thought:

“Let me see who plays the harp so well and hums sweetly.”

She took it and crawled out of the hole. The cat and the blackbird grabbed her - and began to beat and beat her. They beat and beat her until she lost her legs.

They took the cockerel, put it in a basket and brought it home.

And from then on they began to live and be, and even now they live...

We read, watch and listen to children's fairy tales:



WITH early childhood The youngest book lovers see this bird on the pages of children's publications. After all, there are a huge number of nursery rhymes, songs, poems, fairy tales and proverbs where the rooster is the main character.

Petya-Cockerel is an affectionate nickname for a rooster in fairy tales. His image is colorful and bright. Examples of rooster behavior largely coincide with human behavior. In some fairy tales, he is weak, frivolous, disobedient, overly trusting and self-confident. His disobedience and violation of prohibitions leads to trouble. A striking example of this is the fairy tale “The Cockerel is a Golden Comb,” where a fox steals it, and his friends rush to his rescue.

In others, he is a sage, adviser, assistant and protector of the weak, a good watchman, cunning and quick-witted, possessing magical power. This image can be seen in such folk tales, like “Zayushkina’s hut”, “Golden comb rooster and miracle chalk”, “Rooster and millstones”.

In folklore, the rooster is a symbol of protecting the house from evil. The red comb on the head of a rooster is a symbol of knowledge and talents, mostly literary ones. Spurs on the paws are a symbol of fearlessness. The Rooster is not afraid of difficulties. He diligently rakes the ground with his paws and finds a grain of pearl. This means that the rooster is a hardworking bird. As, for example, in the fairy tale “The Cockerel and Two Mice.”

As a literary hero endowed with character, he is especially often found in the author's fairy tales and fables. Let us remember “The Tale of the Golden Cockerel” by A.S. Pushkin, “Rooster and Weathervane” by G.H. Andersen, “Rooster and Dog” by K. Ushinsky, “Rooster and Paints” by V. Suteev, “Who is the Most Beautiful?” E. Karganova, fables by I.A. Krylov and S. Mikhalkov.

The people created a multi-valued image of the Cockerel - their favorite: if in a fairy tale he is an assistant to poor people, protecting them from the rich, skeptical of kings, then in proverbs and jokes the Cockerel is different - perky, daring, always ready for battle. His name was used to define the condition of some people - to rooster... A rooster is a name given to a perky fighter. The rooster is always with the people: time is counted by it (“Rise before the roosters”, “With the roosters”, “First roosters - midnight”, “Second - before dawn”, “Third - dawn”).
In proverbs, the image of a rooster is versatile - it is both a helper in the house and a master in the chicken coop, although sometimes he is arrogant, pugnacious and stupid, but he is always beautiful. Here are a few famous proverbs: “A good housewife will cook a rooster’s ear” (this is what they say about a skillful person), “Caught in the pluck like a rooster” (symbolizes a person in trouble), “When a roast rooster pecks” (means until trouble happens), “The cuckoo praises the rooster because he praises the cuckoo” (this is what they say when they hint at the insincerity of someone’s praise).
Riddles about the rooster have been around since ancient times. Basically, the mystery is based on the beautiful appearance of this bird, and its ability to wake everyone up in the morning with its loud voice. Due to its proud posture and spurs, riddles equate the cockerel with members of the princely and royal family. Pomposity, arrogance, beauty, courage and apparent severity are also noted in riddles about the cockerel.
Tail with patterns,
Boots with spurs,
At night he sings,
Time is counting.

There lived an old man and an old woman, and they lived in great poverty. The only bellies they had were a rooster and a dog, and they fed them poorly. So the dog says to the rooster:
- Come on, brother Petka, let's go into the forest: life here is bad for us.
“Let’s leave,” says the rooster, “it won’t get any worse.”
So they went wherever they looked. We wandered around all day; It was getting dark - it was time to stop for the night. They left the road into the forest and chose a large hollow tree. The rooster flew up onto a branch, the dog climbed into the hollow and fell asleep.
In the morning, just as dawn began to break, the rooster cried: “Ku-ku-re-ku!” The fox heard the rooster; She wanted to eat rooster meat. So she went up to the tree and began praising the rooster:
- What a rooster! I have never seen such a bird: what beautiful feathers, what a red comb, and what a clear voice! Fly to me, handsome.
- What business? - asks the rooster.
- Let's go visit me: today is my housewarming party, and I have a lot of peas in store for you.
“Okay,” says the rooster, “but I can’t go alone: ​​my comrade is with me.”
“This is such happiness! - thought the fox. “Instead of one rooster there will be two.”
- Where is your friend? - she asks. - I’ll invite him to visit too.
“He spends the night there in the hollow,” answers the rooster.
The fox rushed into the hollow, and the dog grabbed its muzzle - tsap!.. Caught and tore the fox to pieces.

(See interpretation: chicken)

A rooster in a dream is a fan for a woman, a rival for men and a competitor in business. Sometimes a dream about a rooster foretells you a meeting with a swaggering and vain person, which will be unpleasant for you. Stabbing him is a sign of frustration. Letting him out of the house is a harbinger of your child's imminent marriage. Fighting roosters in a dream are a sign of quarrels or strife.

Hearing a rooster crow in a dream foretells receiving news that will indicate to you that a moment has arrived that you should not miss. See interpretation: scream.

It is also believed that a rooster in a dream warns of betrayal or deception, as well as that the time has come for acceptance. important decision. If in a dream you hear roosters crowing, then you should avoid quarrels and showdowns that could harm you. Sometimes the crow of a rooster in a dream warns against mistakes or betrayal.

If you dream that a rooster laid an egg, then pleasant surprises await you, which mean the arrival of pleasant guests or the receipt of good news. Sometimes such a dream predicts an unexpected inheritance. See interpretation: feathers, an egg in which you pluck feathers from a rooster's tail, portends misfortune.

Seeing the bright plumage of a rooster in a dream is a sign of imminent good news about the arrival of a friend or lover whom you have not seen for a long time.

Interpretation of dreams from the Family Dream Book

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