Synonym: naif, primitive, unenlightened, uninitiate, uninitiated, uninstructed. Similar words: nail, questionnaire, give, live, five, liver, dived, river. Meaning: [nɑ'ɪːv /naɪ'ɪːv] adj. 1. marked by or showing unaffected simplicity and lack of guile or worldly experience 2. of or created by one without formal training; simple or naive in style 3. inexperienced 4. lacking information or instruction 5. not initiated; deficient in relevant experience.
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(31) Stewart plays the naive new senator.
(32) It's almost too naive to ask!
(33) By his own admission, he was naive.
(34) Kattina was either a practised inquisitor, or very naive.
(35) She was beautiful and sweet but very naive.
(36) I must have been very naive.
(37) They are naive about the competitive environment.
(38) This is where you are so naive.
(39) She is sometimes naive, but she's not stupid.
(40) The first assumption of the Census Bureau, therefore, must be viewed as fatuous at worst, naive at best.
(41) Certainly, more modern uses of the survey method have disregarded some of the rather naive methodological assumptions of the early surveys.
(42) Such events must have undermined even Prokofiev's naive, self-centred confidence.
(43) We're not naive anymore like we were in the 60s.
(44) He held onto the naive belief that Marxism would solve all the world's problems.
(45) Mr Crossland's lawyer told the court that it was a tragic case of a young idealist who was also naive.
(46) Those naive souls who have longed for a simpler and better way have had to consign their visions to pointless daydreams.
(47) The explanations in the official report are so naive that they can not be taken seriously.
(48) A naive operation consists of pushing one crate into an adjacent free area.
(49) Religion has been accused indeed of keeping people docile and naive.
(50) Perhaps Hathaway was naive to buy into his dream of a record for their 7-year - old daughter.
(51) Is anyone in domestic or foreign government stupid enough or naive enough to believe this?
(52) What is in some ways ironic is that a naive notion of necessity had already received a severe jolt from David Hume.
(53) The social action programme is another example of the Labour party's naive employment policies.
(54) The endless debate that centred on the issue at the time was sometimes naive, or ambiguous,[http://sentencedict.com/naive.html] or even dangerous.
(55) Ambitious professors have not been unknown to take advantage of uninformed, naive students to advance their own careers.
(56) Manufacturers wrote their own copy and it appears very naive now.
(57) It had become associated in the popular imagination with something naive, laughable or downright kinky.
(58) Anyone who imagines that any regulatory system can invariably guarantee success is naive.
(59) Little problem had been expected from that workforce: it was young, unorganized and naive.
(60) It was an unequal relationship. He was rich, powerful and experienced -- I was very young and naive.