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foolish

Definition for foolish

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Example Sentences

Not only that, but a lot of their male family members — brothers, brothers-in-law, and fathers — had volunteered unsolicited opinions about how foolish they had been.

From Vox

When Christians believe and propagate foolish things like QAnon, they make it even harder for others to listen.

I think the coronavirus response, which has been incompetent and foolish, has probably also contributed to their grievances.

From Ozy

In Lukashenko’s Belarus, independent political leaders are seen as brave yet reckless, even foolish, for voluntarily jumping into the spotlight and risking his wrath.

From Ozy

By the end of the 1500s, silly was used for “lacking good sense, foolish, irrational, ridiculous.”

Sweden explores new frontiers in our misguided, foolish, pointless obsession with rating and censoring entertainment.

One strip, Foolish Grandpa and Sour Henry, shows Grandpa being hit on the head by a sandbag and blown up by dynamite.

McConnell did what he did in 2005, and he was foolish enough to boast about it in public less than two weeks before an election.

The only thing these “tests” reveal is a window into the foolish psyche of whomever applies them.

Bradlee felt deceived by his friends but, “with both of them gone from my life, resentment seemed foolish.”

It's an idle question, I know; wise men and musty philosophers say that regrets are foolish.

For others life is but a foolish leisure with mock activities and mimic avocations to mask its uselessness.

More foolish, more culpable weakness was never shown than in thus yielding to these schemes.

They that sit on mount Seir, and the Philistines, and the foolish people that dwell in Sichem.

Feeling sixteen and very foolish, she sank to the edge of a chair and muttered something about the charm of the room.

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When To Use

What are other ways to say foolish?

The adjective foolish implies a lack of common sense or good judgment or, sometimes, a weakness of mind: a foolish decision; The child seems foolish. Fatuous implies being not only foolish, dull, and vacant in mind, but complacent and highly self-satisfied as well: fatuous and self-important; fatuous answers. Silly denotes extreme and conspicuous foolishness; it may also refer to pointlessness of jokes, remarks, etc.: silly and senseless behavior; a perfectly silly statement. Inane applies to silliness that is notably lacking in content, sense, or point: inane questions that leave one with no reply. Stupid implies natural slowness or dullness of intellect, or, sometimes, a benumbed or dazed state of mind; it is also used to mean foolish or silly: He was rendered stupid by a blow; It is stupid to do such a thing. Asinine originally meant like an ass; it applies to witlessly stupid conversations or conduct and suggests a lack of social grace or perception: He failed to notice the reaction to his asinine remarks.

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On this page you'll find 169 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to foolish, such as: absurd, crazy, fantastic, ill-advised, insane, and irrational.

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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