No, "do not try to be fool others" does not make sense. It isn't clear if you mean to use "fool" as a verb or a noun. You may mean one of these:
Do not try to fool others. - (Do not try to trick or confuse other people. "Fool" is a verb in this sentence.)
Do not be a fool for others. - (Do not act foolish and allow other people to take advantage of you. "Fool" is a noun in this sentence.)
You could write this at the end, or maybe at the beginning of whatever you are writing: 'This sentence is correct, you fool.'
easy , you dont you fool
You simply put the word deceive in a spot where it fits. Deceive means to trick or fool, so if trick or fool would fit there, so would deceive. "How could you deceive me?!" "People will deceive others to get what they want."
Example sentence - The internet is a good resource for help with your homework but ridiculous for thinking you can fool a teacher with copied answers.
Well I have no clue what you are trying to say, so I don't think it's correct.Try " Our class doesn't fool around so we meet our goals" or " reach our goals "
He found out that the girl had another boyfriend and he felt like a fool.
you such a fool preson :) hope that helped
My ruse to fool you by creating a fake sentence failed because this is a legitmate sentence.
Attempting to argue further will only serve to make a fool of yourself.
'Fooled' is a verb.Fooled is the past tense of 'fool'. Fool can be used as a noun or as a verb, depending on the sentence. Also, almost every word with the ending 'ed' is a verb.
Are you asking, "Can you put the words 'family, knew, something, wrong, never,' and 'fool' into a sentence?" If so, sure....The family knew something was wrong, since Jeremy had never acted like such a fool before.
NO! Don't let people fool you, Stephanie Meyer did.