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    Cred·u·lous
    /ˈkrejələs/

    adjective

    • 1. having or showing too great a readiness to believe things: "a ceremony staged for credulous tourists"
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  3. Credulous means ready to believe especially on slight or uncertain evidence. Learn the etymology, synonyms, antonyms, and examples of credulous from the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  4. Credulous means too willing to believe what you are told and so easily deceived. Learn more about this formal adjective, its opposite, and how to use it in sentences from the Cambridge English Corpus.

  5. Credulous means too willing to believe what you are told and so easily deceived. Learn more about this formal adjective, its opposite, and how to use it in sentences with examples from literature and news sources.

  6. willing to believe or trust too readily, especially without proper or adequate evidence; gullible. Synonyms: unsuspecting, trustful. marked by or arising from credulity: a credulous rumor. credulous. / ˈkrɛdjʊləs / adjective. tending to believe something on little evidence. arising from or characterized by credulity. credulous beliefs.

  7. showing a lack of judgment or experience. “so credulous he believes everything he reads”. synonyms: naif, naive. marked by or showing unaffected simplicity and lack of guile or worldly experience. adjective. disposed to believe on little evidence. “the gimmick would convince none but the most credulous ”. synonyms:

  8. Credulous means disposed to believe too readily or arising from credulity. Find the origin, usage, and examples of credulous and its related words, such as naive, trustful, and incredulous.

  9. Credulous means too ready to believe things and therefore easy to trick. Learn how to pronounce it, see examples and compare it with irony and incredulous.

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