naive|naïve in English
adjective
[nɑ'ɪːv /naɪ'ɪːv]
lacking worldly wisdom, unsuspecting, gullible; childish, innocent, simple, unsophisticated
Use "naive|naïve" in a sentence
1. Afterward, she remained drug-naïve until 1997.
2. Don't act naive!
3. Now, I'm not naive.
4. Don't you mean naive?
5. You stupid naive team Americans...
6. That's a very naive notion, right?
7. Mr Cruchot, you're so naive.
8. He is very childlike and naive.
9. Naive Bayes classifier for multivariate Bernoulli models
10. Her paintings have a naive, dreamlike quality.
11. 18 The naive* will inherit foolishness,
12. They were naive and easily misled.
13. Her naive attitude provoked their derision.
14. I’m Agonizing over My Naive Realism
15. “The Naive Person Believes Every Word”
16. The naive believe every word (15)
17. But that's naive -- and even disingenuous.
18. He was touchingly naive about sex.
19. A naive young man seduced (6-27)
20. Naïve, memory and activated T cells are thus protected by the transducing particles released in vivo.
21. Childishness naive forever traveling in the blue space.
22. He regarded the move as politically naive.
23. 15 The naive* person believes every word,
24. I think that's too extreme, and naive
25. Here is my naive advertising man's suggestion.