Yes it sure is.
The term "gulable" is a misspelling of "gullible," which means easily deceived or tricked. It is indeed a word in the dictionary.
The root word of "gullible" is "gull," which means to deceive or trick someone easily.
"Gullible" is an adjective. It describes a person who is easily deceived or tricked.
There is no such word as gullible. If you believe that you are gullible. A person that will believe anything you tell them is gullible. If you say gullible very slowly, it sounds like oranges.
The root word of credulous is "cred" as in credit and credible.
The term "gulable" is a misspelling of "gullible," which means easily deceived or tricked. It is indeed a word in the dictionary.
It is, only its spelled "gullible".
The problem lies with your spelling. The word is gullible, not guilible, and it is still in the dictionary.
The word "gullible" is, in fact, in the dictionary. This idea that it isn't in the dictionary comes from a play on the meaning of the word, which is when you easily believe something. Basically, when someone tells you that gullible isn't in the dictionary, you easily believe them and go check, showing that you're gullible.
Yes, gullible is a real word. It means easily fooled. Some people might say to you, "did you know that the word gullible isn't in the dictionary?". If you actually check to see, that will prove that you yourself are gullible, thus humiliating you. Watch out for that -- it's the oldest trick in the book. ;)
ha ha ha Because you might have recognized your picture! :) OK who went and checked. Own up.
Gullibility is not a property of tacos. Read your dictionary as to the meaning of gullible.
"Gullible"
Yes, but it's spelled "gullible".
Gullible is the base word
A sentence for gullible: "You dropped your pocket..." "Really where?" "You're so gullible!" ~13434
The root word of "gullible" is "gull," which means to deceive or trick someone easily.