No because we know that cred means believe but the word in means not. So an incredulous person can't believe what is happening
There is cred which means believe, and there is in which means not, so it means not believe.
The word "incredulous" is a synonym of the word "suspicious. " An example of "incredulous" in a sentence is "Most of the jury was incredulous about the prosecuting attorney handling the case. "
The syllable 'cred-' is the root of 'credo'. The verb 'credo' is the first person singular form of the present indicative. It means 'I believe'. Its form in the infinitive is 'credere'.
Assuming you mean cred- as in incredible, credibility, etc., it comes from the Latin word credere (to believe).
Confused, curious, and incredulous are words. Those mean quizzical.
There is cred which means believe, and there is in which means not, so it means not believe.
You said you believe me, but your manner is incredulous.
Incredulous - unbelieving. It applies to a person. A person can be incredulous (doesn't believe) Incredible-means unbelievable but the way it is used usually more like surprising. A thing or something is ikncredible somehing is unbelivable Eg. It is snowing in New York in march it is amazing Eg. The boy stared incredulously at the incredible sight of a UFO which landed in his backyatd
Hard to believe, spectacular, incredulous.
I can't believe you'd ask that...
"Incredulous" means skeptical, unbelieving, or not willing or inclined to believe. For example, "When the manager claimed that his fund had earned 18% interest annually for the last three years, we were incredulous."Sometimes people confuse "incredulous" with "incredible", which means unbelievable, usually in the sense of being amazing, as in an incredible performance or an incredible achievement. One way to remember the difference is that, in general, people are incredulous (doubting) about something, but things(e.g., events, claims, stories) are incredible.
Sceptic, sceptical, incredulous and suspicious
"Incredu" is not a known English word, prefix or suffix. Incredulous is the closest. It is a word meaning unwilling or unable to believe something. For example, "Your incredulous stare tells me there's no way you believe I really sawy that ape at the grocery store."
Incredulous is an adjective as the word communicates a description of emotional situation. However, in common, modern usage the word Incredulous is used as a noun to label a person's status.From word spell check:in·cred·u·lous adj1. unable or unwilling to believe something or completely unconvinced by it2. showing or characterized by disbeliefEncarta® World English Dictionary © 1999 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Developed for Microsoft by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
I am incredulous towards the bible.
His response left me incredulous.
The root word for incredulous I think is incredible.