Meaning
Gullible means "easily tricked or deceived because of being too trusting." It describes a person who believes things too quickly without questioning.
Grammar and Usage
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Part of speech: Adjective
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Used to describe a person (not usually objects or situations).
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Common structure:
- Someone is gullible.
- Gullible people often believe scams or lies.
Common Phrases
- Gullible person
- Too gullible
- Easily gullible
- Gullible enough to believe
Collocations
- Adjective + Noun: gullible child, gullible customer, gullible victim
- Adverb + Adjective: very gullible, extremely gullible, too gullible
- Verb + Adjective: trick someone gullible, exploit gullible people
Examples
- The salesman took advantage of the gullible customer.
- She was too gullible and believed every rumor.
- Don’t be so gullible—not everything on the internet is true.
- Scammers often target gullible people.
- He’s so gullible that he fell for the same trick twice.
- Children can be gullible because they trust adults easily.
- The magician fooled the gullible audience with his simple trick.
- She’s not as gullible as she used to be.
Synonyms or Related
- Naive
- Trusting
- Easily deceived
- Innocent
- Foolish