ha ha ha
Because you might have recognized your picture! :)
OK who went and checked. Own up.
Yes, the word 'gullible' is in the dictionary. It means easily deceived or duped.
The term "gulable" is a misspelling of "gullible," which means easily deceived or tricked. It is indeed a word in the dictionary.
Gullibility is not a property of tacos. Read your dictionary as to the meaning of gullible.
"Gullible"
Yes, but it's spelled "gullible".
The problem lies with your spelling. The word is gullible, not guilible, and it is still in the dictionary.
It is, only its spelled "gullible".
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. The adjective gullible means excessively easy to convince or deceive. A gullible person is one who will accept what they are told (or asked to believe) with few or no questions about the validity of the information.
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. ;)
I am not gullible enough to fall for that one! lol! that's funny and creative! i like you! i like you! ;]
Some jokes to say to gullible people are:Look, it says 'gullible' on the ceiling!When you spell 'orange' it sounds like gullible.Hey, what would you do if there was a fire in the school? I would pull the string. (Point up and see if they look.)Hey, did you know that 'gullible' was taken out of Webster's Dictionary?If you say 'gullible' really slowly, it sounds like 'green beans'.