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Fool (noun)
A person with poor judgment or little intelligence.
“You were a fool to cross that busy road without looking.”
“The village fool threw his own shoes down the well.”
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Fool (noun)
A jester; a person whose role was to entertain a sovereign and the court (or lower personages).
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Fool (noun)
Someone who derives pleasure from something specified.
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Fool (noun)
Buddy, dude, person.
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Fool (noun)
A type of dessert made of puréed fruit and custard or cream.
“an apricot fool; a gooseberry fool”
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Fool (noun)
A particular card in a tarot deck, representing a jester.
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Fool (verb)
To trick; to deceive
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Fool (verb)
To act in an idiotic manner; to act foolishly
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Fool (adjective)
foolish
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Mad (adjective)
Insane; crazy, mentally deranged.
“You want to spend $1000 on a pair of shoes? Are you mad?”
“He’s got this mad idea that he’s irresistible to women.”
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Mad (adjective)
Angry, annoyed.
“Are you mad at me?”
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Mad (adjective)
Wildly confused or excited.
“to be mad with terror, lust, or hatred”
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Mad (adjective)
Extremely foolish or unwise; irrational; imprudent.
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Mad (adjective)
Extremely enthusiastic about; crazy about; infatuated with; overcome with desire for.
“Aren’t you just mad for that red dress?”
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Mad (adjective)
Abnormally ferocious or furious; or, rabid, affected with rabies.
“a mad dog”
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Mad (adjective)
Intensifier, signifies an abundance or high quality of a thing; very, much or many.
“I gotta give you mad props for scoring us those tickets.”
“Their lead guitarist has mad skills.”
“There are always mad girls at those parties.”
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Mad (adjective)
Having impaired polarity.
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Mad (adverb)
Intensifier; to a large degree; unbelievably.
“He was driving mad slow.”
“It’s mad hot today.”
“He seems mad keen on her.”
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Mad (verb)
To be or become mad. 14th-19th c.
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Mad (verb)
To madden, to anger, to frustrate. from 15th c.
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Fool (noun)
a person who acts unwisely or imprudently; a silly person
“I felt a bit of a fool”
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Fool (noun)
a person who is duped or imposed on
“he is the fool of circumstances”
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Fool (noun)
a jester or clown, especially one retained in a royal or noble household.
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Fool (noun)
a cold dessert made of pureed fruit mixed or served with cream or custard
“raspberry fool with cream”
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Fool (verb)
trick or deceive (someone); dupe
“don’t be fooled into paying out any more of your hard-earned cash”
“she tried to fool herself that she had stopped loving him”
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Fool (verb)
act in a joking, frivolous, or teasing way
“some lads in the pool were fooling around”
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Fool (verb)
engage in casual or extramarital sexual activity.
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Fool (adjective)
foolish; silly
“that damn fool waiter”
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Mad (adjective)
mentally ill; insane
“he felt as if he were going mad”
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Mad (adjective)
(of behaviour or an idea) extremely foolish; not sensible
“Antony’s mother told him he was mad to be leaving Dublin”
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Mad (adjective)
in a frenzied mental or physical state
“she pictured loved ones mad with anxiety about her”
“it was a mad dash to get ready”
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Mad (adjective)
(of a dog) rabid.
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Mad (adjective)
very enthusiastic about someone or something
“he’s mad about football”
“another myth is that Scorpios are sex-mad”
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Mad (adjective)
very exciting.
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Mad (adjective)
very angry
“don’t be mad at me”
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Mad (adjective)
great; remarkable
“this author has mad skills with the written word”
“I got mad respect for him”
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Mad (adverb)
very; extremely
“he was mad cool—we immediately hit it off”
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Mad (verb)
make (someone) mad
“had I but seen thy picture in this plight, it would have madded me”