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  1. FOOL Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    The meaning of FOOL is a person lacking in judgment or prudence. How to use fool in a sentence.

  2. The Fools - Wikipedia

    The Fools performing in Scituate, Massachusetts, 2015 The Fools are a Massachusetts rock band best known for the party atmosphere of their live performances and tongue-in-cheek original …

  3. FOOL | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

    The man's a complete fool! Any fool can teach himself to type. You must think I'm a bloody fool. He's given me the keys to his car - the fool! I think it amuses him to see people make fools of …

  4. FOOL definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary

    If someone fools you, they deceive or trick you. They tried to fool you into coming after us.

  5. Stock Market News & Investing Research | The Motley Fool

    1 day ago · Here are 10 stocks that could be excellent additions to your portfolio for the rest of 2026 and for years to come. Learn how you can make money investing in the wave of …

  6. Fools - definition of fools by The Free Dictionary

    To confound or prove wrong; surprise, especially pleasantly: We were sure they would fail, but they fooled us. 1. Informal. a. To speak or act facetiously or in jest; joke: I was just fooling …

  7. Fool Definition & Meaning | Britannica Dictionary

    A smart or clever person can be described as no fool or as nobody's fool. He may not look very smart, but he's no fool. Don't try to trick her—she's nobody's fool. If you keep playing the fool …

  8. fool, n.¹ & adj. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English …

    A person whose behaviour suggests a lack of intelligence, common sense, or good judgement; a silly person, an idiot; (now often) a person who acts unwisely or imprudently on a particular …

  9. Fool - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com

    In the Middle Ages, a fool was a clown or jester. Today, fools are simply silly people who clown around or lack common sense.

  10. fool - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

    6 days ago · Displaced native Old English dwæs. fool (plural fools) You were a fool to cross that busy road without looking. The village fool threw his own shoes down the well.