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adj

naive

neye-EEV
adj
1
Lacking experience, judgement, or worldly knowledge; too trusting or simple in one's thinking.
"It was naive of him to think the deal had no hidden costs."
"She admitted her younger self had been naive about how the industry really worked."
noun
1
A person who is naive; someone easily fooled.
"He wasn't some naive fresh out of school — he'd run three companies."

How to Use Naive

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishToo trusting, inexperienced, or simple-minded about how things really work.

Common mistake

Naive isn't the same as stupid — it describes a lack of experience or awareness, not a lack of intelligence.

Common pairings
politically naive naive optimism it would be naive to think

Word Forms

naiver comparative, more naive comparative, naives plural, naivest superlative, most naive superlative

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It was _____ of him to think the deal had no hidden costs.

Etymology

From French naïve, the feminine of naïf, from Latin nativus meaning "native" or "natural." Related to the word "native."

Related Words

Rhymes for naive

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial