gullible in English

adjective
1
easily persuaded to believe something; credulous.
an attempt to persuade a gullible public to spend their money

Use "gullible" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "gullible" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "gullible", or refer to the context using the word "gullible" in the English Dictionary.

1. He's so gullible he'll believe anything.

2. He felt gullible, patronized, bamboozled.

3. Credulous: willing to believe too readily; gullible

4. Synonyms: gullible antonyms: inCredulous, skeptical similar words:

5. Credulous: Disposed to believe too readily; gullible

6. How can you be so gullible! He not really French.

7. The swindlers had roped into a number of gullible persons.

8. I'm so gullible I would have believed him.

9. He is resistant to change, gullible and easily led.

10. Some seniors are gullible, trusting scam artists only too often.

11. Plastic replicas of the Greek pottery are sold to gullible tourists.

12. Simple-ad men call the shots and they want gullible audiences.

13. Coypu is often gullible because of how easily he trusts others.

14. That makes us a little bit gullible and very, very predictable.

15. He seemed to treat me as if I were a gullible schoolgirl.

16. The advertisement is aimed at gullible young women worried about their weight.

17. Maria Luisa isn't the gullible little girl she was last year in Seville.

18. Lust and greed are more gullible than innocence. Mason Cooley 

19. He must have been pretty gullible to fall for that old trick.

20. 8 He must have been pretty gullible to fall for that old trick.

21. Certainly not for a wasteful spendthrift, who preyed upon a gullible old woman!

22. Gullible hadn't been driving a great big lorry around the place and putting down rat poison.

23. 19 We wheedled the book ourselves out of that gullible weakling Fleming over at Dull.

24. He had never seen her like this before, gullible and giggly, at times even shy and blushing.

25. They have people hanging about outside on the pavement trying to entice gullible idiots in.

26. Sometimes she seemed such a gullible innocent, sometimes she was an infuriating harridan, sometimes a malevolent witch.

27. Informal a naive, gullible, or unsuspecting person (often in the phrase a Babe in arms) 3

28. There are any number of miracle cures on the market for people gullible enough to buy them.

29. Topics ; Define: Egress, Newspeak ; Oxford BefooledThe Oxford English Dictionary defines ''gullible'' as ''easily cheated; Befooled.'' Let's use it …

30. It has a cult-like following with the potential to exploit gullible people and reinforce obsessional behaviour.

31. Throughout the land, gullible 13-year-olds would gasp in awe at the revelations laid before them.

32. 6 Life is no bed of roses for the new dealer, least of all if female and of a gullible disposition.

33. Ergo: gullible viewers should keep a 24-carat caveat emptor in mind every time they pick up the remote.

34. Life is no bed of roses for the new dealer, least of all if female and of a gullible disposition.

35. It's easy to blame the public for being gullible enough to buy dieting products, but it's the companies who sell them who should take responsibility.

36. This is the first step in minimizing the ageist myths that may exist around the older victim being naive, gullible and easy to convince.

37. Companies/ institutions running such schemes exploit existing regulatory gaps and lack of strict administrative measures to dupe poor and gullible people of their hard-earned savings.

38. She was described by her neighbors as a sweet but gullible woman who allowed the man to live in her house as a source of extra money.

39. The definition of Credulity is a willingness to believe things too easily. An example of Credulity is someone who falls for lies easily, a gullible person.

40. Its is similar in usage to "gullible." Creditable also means "worth of trust," but also mean "worthy of praise."

41. If a swindler is trying to sell you fake medicine, then he is "preying on your Credulity." This noun is associated with being naïve, gullible or innocent.

42. The whole record of Bolshevism and Jewishness strongly indicates that Bolsheviks, like Fascists, used gullible and deluded Jews, the minority of Jews to be sure, to dig their own graves, sign

43. Credulous From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English cred‧u‧lous /ˈkredjələs $ -dʒə-/ adjective formal always believing what you are told, and therefore easily deceived SYN gullible Quinn charmed Credulous investors out of millions of dollars.

44. Credulous comes from the 16th-century Latin credulus, or "easily believes." A synonym for Credulous is gullible, and both terms describe a person who accepts something willingly without a lot of supporting facts

45. This page shows answers to the clue Credulous, followed by 7 definitions like “Believed too readily”, “Overly ready to believe” and “Apt to believe on slight evidence”.Synonyms for Credulous are gullible, illogical and irrational.

46. If you thought that Appeasement in the 1930s was about well intentioned but gullible politicians who were deceived by Hitler, that Churchill was always opposed to fascism, that the majority of the British elite never colluded with Nazi Germany, then be prepared to be shocked.

47. McTROTTER FLOGS A BOG FOR pounds 60,000; He targets gullible Yanks on internet Other attractions include Glenveagh National Park, home to 14,000 hectares of mountain, raised Bogland, lakes and woodlands, which give the area its name: Glen of the Birches.