a wise man
The word 'fool' is both a verb (fool, fools, fooling, fooled) and a noun (fool, fools). Example uses: Verb: It's not good to fool mother nature. Noun: A fool and his money are soon parted.
The noun 'fool' is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a person.The word 'fool' is also a verb: fool, fools, fooling, fooled.
Pope Gregory Created April Fools day, As back in 1562, People were told to celebrate the new year in April 1st, Then he fooled them.
of Fool
The past tense of "fool" is "fooled."
fool or fooled
That whippersnapper thought he had fooled this old fool. The fox fooled the bloodhound month after month.
Fools are fools of their own accord, zombies cannot help it.
To fool people like you?
An April fool is a person who suffers from a trick played on April Fools' Day.
ain't nobody's foola fool and his money are soon partedfool's goldfooling aroundApril fools!children and fools tell the truthact the foolfool hearty
The line "She might have fooled me, but she didn't fool my mother" is from the movie "The Manchurian Candidate" (1962), spoken by the character Eleanor Shaw Iselin.