-
1 fool
[fuːl]1. nouna person without sense or intelligence:أحْمَقHe is such a fool he never knows what to do.
2. verb1) to deceive:يَخْدَع، يَغُشShe completely fooled me with her story.
2) ( often with about or around) to act like a fool or playfully:يَتَسَكَّع، يُمْضي وَقْتَه كالأحْمَقStop fooling about!
-
2 fool
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على -
3 fool
غَشَّ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: to deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. -
4 make a fool of
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على -
5 make a fool of
سَخِرَ \ ridicule: to laugh unkindly at and make (sb. or sth.) seem foolish: His sister ridiculed his efforts at dancing. jeer: to laugh rudely and unkindly: The crowd jeered (at him) when he missed the ball. scoff: to say rudely that sth. is worthless: He scoffed at my efforts to paint a picture. laugh at: to laugh unkindly at (sb. or sth. that one considers foolish): Everyone laughed at him when he missed the ball. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mock: to laugh cruelly at (sb.) and treat him as a fool (esp. by copying his speech or manner): They mocked (at) his efforts to speak their language. \ See Also هَزِئ مِن -
6 play the fool
تَصَرَّفَ كالأبْلَه \ play the fool: to behaviour; behave foolishly on purpose. \ تَظَاهَرَ بِالبَلَه \ play the fool: to behave foolishly on purpose. -
7 make a fool of
to make (someone) appear ridiculous or stupid:يَجْعَلُه أضْحوكَةًHe made a real fool of her by promising to marry her and then leaving her when he had spent all her money.
-
8 make a fool of oneself
to act in such a way that people consider one ridiculous or stupid:يَجْعَل من نَفْسِه أضْحوكَةًShe made a fool of herself at the party.
-
9 play the fool
to act in a foolish manner, especially with the intention of amusing other people:يَتَحامَق، يَتَصَرَّف كالأحْمَقHe always played the fool when the teacher left the classroom.
-
10 damn
-
11 مغفل
1́ adj. stupid, foolish, fool, silly, simple minded, weak minded, simple, dumb, dense, fat witted, thick headed, mutton headed [sl.], pointless, rubbishy, moronic, licentious, soft headed [sl.]2́ n. simpleton, fool, dupe [sl.], numskull [sl.], dolt [sl.], dullard [sl.], dunce [sl.], dunderhead [sl.], nincompoop [sl.], ninny [sl.], nitwit [sl.], softy [sl.] -
12 ضحك على
ضَحِكَ على: خَدَعَto pull someone's leg, dupe, gull, fool, make a fool of, bluff, deceive; to cheat -
13 تصرف
تَصَرَّفَ \ act: to behave: You are acting like a fool. behave: to act in a certain way: If you can’t behave (yourself), you’ll be punished. You behaved very badly. deal with: to treat; attend to: I’ll deal with this question myself. If a thief breaks in, my dog will deal with him. do: to act; behave: You must do as I do. Well done!. \ See Also سلك (سَلَكَ) \ تَصَرَّفَ كالأبْلَه \ play the fool: to behaviour; behave foolishly on purpose. -
14 خدع
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على -
15 سخر
سَخِرَ \ ridicule: to laugh unkindly at and make (sb. or sth.) seem foolish: His sister ridiculed his efforts at dancing. jeer: to laugh rudely and unkindly: The crowd jeered (at him) when he missed the ball. scoff: to say rudely that sth. is worthless: He scoffed at my efforts to paint a picture. laugh at: to laugh unkindly at (sb. or sth. that one considers foolish): Everyone laughed at him when he missed the ball. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mock: to laugh cruelly at (sb.) and treat him as a fool (esp. by copying his speech or manner): They mocked (at) his efforts to speak their language. \ See Also هَزِئ مِن -
16 cheat
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على -
17 deceive
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على -
18 hoax
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على -
19 mislead, misled
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على -
20 to take advantage of
خَدَعَ \ cheat: to deceive; get sth. dishonestly from sb.: Some men cheat at cards. That lawyer cheated me out of $15. deceive: to cause (sb.) to believe what is untrue; play a trick on (sb.). fool: deceive: He fooled her into believing his promises. hoax: to trick (sb.) by telling lies that cause trouble: Firemen are often hoaxed by untrue reports of a fire. make a fool of: to trick; make (sb.) seem silly in front of others. mislead, misled: to give wrong ideas to (sb.); cause sb. to be (or to do) wrong: You misled me into thinking it was easy to teach. to take advantage of: to make unfair use of; deceive: The shopkeeper took advantage of my inexperience and charged me too much. trick: deceive. \ See Also غش (غَشَّ)، ضلل (ضَلَّلَ)، اِحْتَالَ على
См. также в других словарях:
Fool — Fool, n. [OE. fol, n. & adj., F. fol, fou, foolish, mad; a fool, prob. fr. L. follis a bellows, wind bag, an inflated ball; perh. akin to E. bellows. Cf. {Folly}, {Follicle}.] 1. One destitute of reason, or of the common powers of understanding;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fool — Ⅰ. fool [1] ► NOUN 1) a person who acts unwisely. 2) historical a jester or clown. ► VERB 1) trick or deceive. 2) (fool about/around) act in a joking or frivolous way. 3) … English terms dictionary
fool — fool1 [fo͞ol] n. [ME fol < OFr (Fr fou) < LL follis < L, windbag, bellows: see FOLLICLE] 1. a) a person with little or no judgment, common sense, wisdom, etc.; silly or stupid person; simpleton b) Obs. a mentally retarded person 2. a man … English World dictionary
Fool — steht für: Fool (Süßspeise) April Fool, ein Segelboot The Fool, eine Designergruppe Fool (Roman), Roman von Christopher Moore FOOL steht für: Flughafen Libreville Leon M ba in Gabun (ICAO Code) … Deutsch Wikipedia
Fool — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Fool Single por Shakira Lanzado 2003 Grabado 2001 Género Rock Duración … Wikipedia Español
Fool — Fool, v. t. 1. To infatuate; to make foolish. Shak. [1913 Webster] For, fooled with hope, men favor the deceit. Dryden. [1913 Webster] 2. To use as a fool; to deceive in a shameful or mortifying manner; to impose upon; to cheat by inspiring… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fool — fool, idiot, imbecile, moron, simpleton, natural are often used popularly and interchangeably of one regarded as lacking sense or good judgment but each can be more precisely applied to someone mentally deficient in a given degree. Fool, the most … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Fool — Fool, n. [Cf. F. fouler to tread, crush. Cf. 1st {Foil}.] A compound of gooseberries scalded and crushed, with cream; commonly called gooseberry fool. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Fool — Fool, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Fooled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Fooling}.] To play the fool; to trifle; to toy; to spend time in idle sport or mirth. [1913 Webster] Is this a time for fooling? Dryden. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fool — [n] stupid or ridiculous person ass, birdbrain*, blockhead*, bonehead*, boob*, bore, buffoon, clod*, clown, cretin*, dimwit*, dolt*, dope*, dumb ox*, dunce, dunderhead*, easy mark*, fair game*, fathead*, goose*, halfwit, idiot, ignoramus,… … New thesaurus
fool — index bilk, deceive, defraud, delude, dupe, ensnare, entrap, evade (deceive), illude … Law dictionary