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gullible
adjective as in naive, trusting
Example Sentences
Morrow poses this riddle to an unsuspecting Hybrid once he figures out their adult bodies are governed by the malleable, gullible minds of children.
This week, an article appeared there under the gullible headline “Republicans run a risky strategy for holding the House that rests on redrawn maps,” which for some reason required three bylines.
But fear not, gullible Americans, Kennedy has promised to pinpoint a cause for the complex condition by September!
Ms Slinn added: "You just feel a bit stupid, don't you? You think 'how gullible can you be to give £5,000 to people you don't even know who they are?'."
To not see this for what it is can be attributed to being naïve and gullible, to self-deception by outright denial, or to being complicit.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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