FOOL vs PATSY: NOUN
- A mentally deficient person; an idiot.
- A dessert made of stewed or puréed fruit mixed with cream or custard and served cold.
- One who subverts convention or orthodoxy or varies from social conformity in order to reveal spiritual or moral truth.
- A member of a royal or noble household who provided entertainment, as with jokes or antics; a jester.
- A person with a talent or enthusiasm for a certain activity.
- One who has been tricked or made to appear ridiculous; a dupe.
- One who acts unwisely on a given occasion.
- One who is deficient in judgment, sense, or understanding.
- A professional clown employed to entertain a king or nobleman in the middle ages
- A person who lacks good judgment
- A person deficient in intellect; one who acts absurdly, or pursues a course contrary to the dictates of wisdom; one without judgment; a simpleton; a dolt.
- One destitute of reason, or of the common powers of understanding; an idiot; a natural.
- A compound of gooseberries scalded and crushed, with cream; -- commonly called gooseberry fool.
- Harlequin, clown, jester. See zany.
- Synonyms and Simpleton, ninny, dolt, witling, blockhead. driveler.
- To act like one void of understanding.
- A conical paper cap which dunces at school are sometimes compelled to wear by way of punishment.
- A wanton, bad, or wicked person.
- Figuratively, a tool, toy, sport, butt, or victim: as, to be the fool of circumstances.
- One who counterfeits mental weakness or folly; a professional jester or buffoon; a retainer dressed in motley, with a pointed cap and bells on his head, and a mock scepter or bauble in his hand, formerly kept by persons of rank for the purpose of making sport. See bauble.
- One who is deficient in judgment or sense; a silly or stupid person; one who manifests either habitual or occasional lack of discernment or common sense: chiefly used as a term of disparagement, contempt, or self-depreciation.
- One who is deficient in intellect; a weak-minded or idiotic person.
- A sort of custard; a dish made of fruit crushed and scalded or stewed and mixed with whipped cream and sugar: as, gooseberry fool.
- A person who is gullible and easy to take advantage of
- A light paste of flour and water, like pie-crust.
- A person who is taken advantage of, especially by being cheated or blamed for something.
- A person easily taken advantage of, cheated, blamed, or ridiculed.
- A person who is gullible and easy to take advantage of
FOOL vs PATSY: ADJECTIVE
- Foolish; stupid.
- N/A
FOOL vs PATSY: VERB
- Spend frivolously and unwisely
- Fool or hoax
- Indulge in horseplay
- Make a fool or dupe of
- N/A
FOOL vs PATSY: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To toy, tinker, or mess.
- To engage in idle or frivolous activity.
- To feign; pretend.
- To behave comically; clown.
- To speak or act facetiously or in jest; joke.
- To deceive or trick; dupe.
- To play the fool; to trifle; to toy; to spend time in idle sport or mirth.
- To confound or prove wrong; surprise, especially pleasantly.
- N/A
FOOL vs PATSY: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To infatuate; to make foolish.
- To use as a fool; to deceive in a shameful or mortifying manner; to impose upon; to cheat by inspiring foolish confidence.
- To get rid of foolishly; to spend in trifles, idleness, folly, or without advantage.
- N/A
FOOL vs PATSY: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To play the buffoon; act as a fool or jester.
- To make a fool of; expose to contempt; disappoint; deceive; impose on.
- To make foolish; infatuate.
- To beguile; cheat: as, to fool one out of his money.
- Foolish; silly.
- To play the fool; act like a weak-minded or foolish person; potter aimlessly or mischievously; toy; trifle.
- (idiom) (play/act) To behave in a playful or comical manner.
- (idiom) (play/act) To act in an irresponsible or foolish manner.
- N/A
FOOL vs PATSY: RELATED WORDS
- Fritter, Goosey, Jester, Schlemiel, Muggins, Goofy, Patsy, Dopey, Sucker, Silly, Befool, Chump, Foolish, Stupid, Dupe
- Victim, Scapegoating, Idiot, Scapegoat, Soft touch, Shlemiel, Fish, Gull, Mark, Fall guy, Mug, Sucker, Schlemiel, Fool, Chump
FOOL vs PATSY: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Mug, Cockamamie, Goosey, Jester, Schlemiel, Muggins, Goofy, Patsy, Dopey, Sucker, Silly, Chump, Foolish, Stupid, Dupe
- Mrs, Pigeon, Sap, Culprit, Victim, Idiot, Soft touch, Fish, Gull, Mark, Mug, Sucker, Schlemiel, Fool, Chump
FOOL vs PATSY: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Jealous I am, and possibly a fool, But not a fool for being jealous.
- What one fool can do, another fool can.
- If he was a fool, call him a fool.
- He was a fool and worse than a fool.
- Fool, thou art a Fool, thou undcrftandeft not the Matter.
- You were saying how a fool can only fool you so long.
- Being a fool sometimes does not make one a fool all the time.
- Best Happy April fool Day Pranks Ideas Jokes Tricks to fool everyone!
- Motley Fool analyst Vincent Shen and senior Fool.
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- Patsy Klaus, Office of Justice Programs, US Dept.
- Lee, Patsy Trawick Brackin, and Sidney Paul Kaiser.
- Now Patsy is also a common Irish cognomen.
- Alas, I have never seen the Patsy footage.
- Healey, Patsy, Harris, Neil, Van den Broeck, Pieter.
- Or the unfortunate patsy in a massive conspiracy?
- Patsy Finley (8-21-14) service 8-23-14 Patsy Ann Finley, 71, of Savannah, died Thursday, Aug. 21, in Savannah.
- Also on the album is four other songs by Patsy Trigg and a bonus track of the audio book, exciting expressed by Patsy.
- Patsy was abused while in foster care, and failing to encourage the reunification of Patsy and Alma.
- OHIO: Patsy Hudson bones identified, suspects charged Patsy Hudson has been found.
FOOL vs PATSY: QUESTIONS
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