Antonym: sagacious, wise. Similar words: polish, abolish, polished, fool, hooligan, symbolise, symbolism, publisher. Meaning: [fuːlɪʃ] adj. 1. devoid of good sense or judgment 2. having or revealing stupidity.
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151. Education, n. That which discloses to the wise and disguises from the foolish their lack of understanding. Ambrose Bierce
152. Anyone foolish enough to believe in horoscopes needs a brain transplant.
153. It would be foolish to claim that the unions have done nothing right since 1979.
154. Toulouse would be a rich prize and it would have been foolish to allow the claim to drop.
155. Our interplanetary visitors might well be amazed at such foolish credulity.
156. The police sounded surprised that I had bothered to call them, and I walked back to the boatyard feeling strangely foolish.
157. All that money that might get wasted on foolish things like helping the poor.
158. From a rational choice perspective, you would be rather foolish to vote in a presidential election.
159. Those doughty editorial professionals at the Star have once again helped us avert a foolish mistake just in the nick of time!
159. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
160. It's stupid to boast about yourself. It's foolish to flatter and pamper yourself. It's wrong to be lenient with yourself. Dr T.P.Chia
161. No, of course he didn't - how foolish could she get?
162. It would be foolish to believe that any group of people can interact without a political undercurrent.
163. Only the most foolish Tory would fail to make apologies to the electorate for his party's errors.
164. Even if these things can be believed, it would be foolish to write off the Khmers Rouges.
165. Maybe her request sounded foolish, but the prospect of facing Robert after everything that had happened between them was disturbing.
166. Often she would say something foolish, immediately regret it, then, to cover her embarrassment, say something worse.
167. He would often do very foolish things just to prove how daring he was.
168. And yet her name was like a summons to all my foolish blood. James Joyce
169. Just a few days ago I was foolish enough to allow my hopes to rise.
170. Everything said at this foolish board meeting unwittingly points to Scott's consummate grasp of the essentials of television.
171. The current tuberculosis epidemic, which threatens the entire population with antibiotic-resistant strains, is the result of one such foolish cutback.
172. It was foolish to be afraid of something lying motionless on a table.
173. The good Duke was foolish enough to make enquiries about certain precious relics and the King's agents closed in.
174. Woe betide anyone who is foolish enough to leave his rod unattended when barbel fishing.
175. Still, Congress has been slow to take up arms against foolish laws that promote pollution.
176. It would be foolish to nationalize all the means of production.
177. He afterwards thought this refusal very foolish and regretted that he did not go.
178. A restrained virility that boded ill for anyone so incredibly foolish as to even think of challenging his authority.
179. If he had been foolish enough to leave his seat, he would have crashed at once against the rear wall.
180. It was a calculated attempt to make the governor look foolish.
More similar words: polish, abolish, polished, fool, hooligan, symbolise, symbolism, publisher, publish, English, metropolis, published, churlish, embellish, accomplish, establish, accomplished, unpublished, establishment, accomplishment, accomplishments, establishment of, english civil war, foot, food, on foot, footing, seafood, football, footwear.