The moral of this story is about the importance of credibility. The boy's false alarms made the villagers think he was not reliable. When there was an actual danger (the wolf), his cries for help were ignored. This shows that we should always be truthful so that others can trust us when we really need help.
The story of 'The Kid Who Cried Wolf' tells of a child who falsely warns of a wolf multiple times. As a result, when a wolf actually appears, the villagers don't believe him, and he learns the hard lesson of honesty. It teaches the importance of telling the truth.
The main character is the kid, of course, and then there are the villagers. The kid is the one who cries wolf falsely, and the villagers are the ones who are deceived by the kid at first and then stop believing him in the end.
The moral is that lying will make people not believe you even when you're telling the truth. If you keep crying wolf when there is no wolf, people will stop taking your warnings seriously.
It's a tale about a girl who falsely claims a wolf is attacking multiple times. When a real wolf comes, no one believes her. It teaches us not to lie or people won't trust us when it's important.