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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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Sucker (noun)
A person or animal that sucks, especially a breast or udder; especially a suckling animal, young mammal before it is weaned. from late 14th century
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Sucker (noun)
An undesired stem growing out of the roots or lower trunk of a shrub or tree, especially from the rootstock of a grafted plant or tree. from 1570s
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Sucker (noun)
A parasite; a sponger.
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Sucker (noun)
An organ or body part that does the sucking; especially a round structure on the bodies of some insects, frogs, and octopuses that allows them to stick to surfaces.
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Sucker (noun)
A thing that works by sucking something.
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Sucker (noun)
The embolus, or bucket, of a pump; also, the valve of a pump basket.
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Sucker (noun)
A pipe through which anything is drawn.
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Sucker (noun)
A small piece of leather, usually round, having a string attached to the center, which, when saturated with water and pressed upon a stone or other body having a smooth surface, adheres, by reason of the atmospheric pressure, with such force as to enable a considerable weight to be thus lifted by the string; formerly used by children as a plaything.
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Sucker (noun)
A suction cup.
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Sucker (noun)
An animal such as the octopus and remora, which adhere to other bodies with such organs.
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Sucker (noun)
Any fish in the family Catostomidae of North America and eastern Asia, which have mouths modified into downward-pointing, suckerlike structures for feeding in bottom sediments from 1750s
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Sucker (noun)
A piece of candy which is sucked from 1820s; a lollipop from 1900s
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Sucker (noun)
A hard drinker; a soaker.
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Sucker (noun)
An inhabitant of Illinois.
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Sucker (noun)
A person who is easily deceived, tricked or persuaded to do something; a naive person from 1830s
“One poor sucker had actually given her his life’s savings.”
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Sucker (noun)
A person irresistibly attracted by something specified.
“A sucker for ghost stories.”
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Sucker (noun)
The penis.
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Sucker (noun)
A thing or object. Any thing or object being called attention to with emphasis, as in “this sucker”.
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Sucker (noun)
Generalized term of reference to a person.
“See if you can get that sucker working again.”
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Sucker (verb)
To strip the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of suckers.
“to sucker maize”
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Sucker (verb)
To produce suckers, to throw up additional stems or shoots.
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Sucker (verb)
To fool someone; to take advantage of someone.
“The salesman suckered him into signing an expensive maintenance contract.”
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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”