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stupid
adjective as in not intelligent; irresponsible
Strongest matches
Strong matches
Example Sentences
They all made him look stupid and he won't rest until they pay for it.
It’s not even my daughter, it’s our stupid dogs.
Ben Collins, a former NBC News journalist who is chief executive of The Onion’s parent company, said on X: “We're planning on making a very stupid website.”
"I felt so stupid and out of place for not knowing private schools existed and so it affected my academic ability," she said.
“So I'm seeing them coming in thinking, ‘Well the money's being recovered’, but you know, stupid me, didn't realise that he was shuffling it all into my Wise account.”
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When To Use
What are other ways to say stupid?
The adjective stupid implies natural slowness or dullness of intellect, or, sometimes, a benumbed or dazed state of mind; it is also used to mean foolish or silly: He was rendered stupid by a blow; It is stupid to do such a thing. Foolish implies a lack of common sense or good judgment or, sometimes, a weakness of mind: a foolish decision; The child seems foolish. Fatuous implies being not only foolish, dull, and vacant in mind, but complacent and highly self-satisfied as well: fatuous and self-important; fatuous answers. Silly denotes extreme and conspicuous foolishness; it may also refer to pointlessness of jokes, remarks, etc.: silly and senseless behavior; a perfectly silly statement. Inane applies to silliness that is notably lacking in content, sense, or point: inane questions that leave one with no reply. Asinine originally meant like an ass; it applies to witlessly stupid conversations or conduct and suggests a lack of social grace or perception: He failed to notice the reaction to his asinine remarks.
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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