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was fool
verb
To trick; to make a fool of someone.
Exact(10)
I was fool enough to have Cyril Ray and Elizabeth David together to dinner.
All we did was fool around, getting into all these nooks and crannies, looking for stuff to break or steal.
"All I'd ever done was fool around in the living room -- mom used to yell when she heard things break.
Because if someone was fool enough to set up a prize just for men, well, we'd see the problem then, wouldn't we?
For example, Columbia's The House Bunny penetrated and celebrated the Playboy Mansion through a deal with Hugh Hefner, and unlike Fox it was fool enough to pay for the privilege.
The best I could do was fool around with a hockey stick and a tennis ball as I roller-skated up and down our suburban cul-de-sac near St . Petersburg with a taped rectangle against the garage door as my net.
Similar(50)
Although Thursday's ruling embarrassed Major League Baseball, two prominent antidoping experts noted that no testing system was fool-proof.
He was "Fool-Dini," an illusionist who is credited with being the first magician to appear on live television, on a show called "The Merry Mailman" in the infancy of the medium in the late 1940's.
A popular type of painting in the 19th century was fool-the-eye realism in which objects, recognizable and nameable ones, were presented to the viewer in an upright, frontal manner like Mr. McLaughlin's.
No one was fooled.
Even Picasso was fooled.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com