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fool
(redirected from act the fool)

   Also found in: Idioms, Encyclopedia 0.06 sec.
fool  (fl)
n.
1. One who is deficient in judgment, sense, or understanding.
2. One who acts unwisely on a given occasion: I was a fool to have quit my job.
3. One who has been tricked or made to appear ridiculous; a dupe: They made a fool of me by pretending I had won.
4. Informal A person with a talent or enthusiasm for a certain activity: a dancing fool; a fool for skiing.
5. A member of a royal or noble household who provided entertainment, as with jokes or antics; a jester.
6. One who subverts convention or orthodoxy or varies from social conformity in order to reveal spiritual or moral truth: a holy fool.
7. A dessert made of stewed or puréed fruit mixed with cream or custard and served cold.
8. Archaic A mentally deficient person; an idiot.
v. fooled, fool·ing, fools
v.tr.
1. To deceive or trick; dupe: "trying to learn how to fool a trout with a little bit of floating fur and feather" Charles Kuralt.
2. To confound or prove wrong; surprise, especially pleasantly: We were sure they would fail, but they fooled us.
v.intr.
1. Informal
a. To speak or act facetiously or in jest; joke: I was just fooling when I said I had to leave.
b. To behave comically; clown.
c. To feign; pretend: He said he had a toothache but he was only fooling.
2. To engage in idle or frivolous activity.
3. To toy, tinker, or mess: shouldn't fool with matches.
adj. Informal
Foolish; stupid: off on some fool errand or other.
Phrasal Verbs:
fool around Informal
1. To engage in idle or casual activity; putter: was fooling around with the old car in hopes of fixing it.
2. To engage in frivolous activity; make fun.
3. To engage in casual, often promiscuous sexual acts.
fool away
To waste (time or money) foolishly; squander: fooled away the week's pay on Friday night.
Idiom:
play/act the fool
1. To act in an irresponsible or foolish manner.
2. To behave in a playful or comical manner.

[Middle English fol, from Old French, from Late Latin follis, windbag, fool, from Latin follis, bellows; see bhel-2 in Indo-European roots.]
Word History: The pejorative nature of the term fool is strengthened by a knowledge of its etymology. Its source, the Latin word follis, meant "a bag or sack, a large inflated ball, a pair of bellows." Users of the word in Late Latin, however, saw a resemblance between the bellows or the inflated ball and a person who was what we would call "a windbag" or "an airhead." The word, which passed into English by way of French, is first recorded in English in a work written around the beginning of the 13th century with the sense "a foolish, stupid, or ignorant person."

fool 1
Noun
1. a person who lacks sense or judgment
2. a person who is made to appear ridiculous
3. (formerly) a professional jester living in a royal or noble household
4. play or act the fool to deliberately act foolishly
Verb
1. to deceive (someone), esp. in order to make them look ridiculous
2. fool around or about with Informal to act or play with irresponsibly or aimlessly
3. to speak or act in a playful or jesting manner [Latin follis bellows]

fool 2
Noun
Chiefly Brit a dessert made from a puree of fruit with cream [perhaps from fool1]
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.foolfool - a person who lacks good judgment
ass - a pompous fool
buffoon, clown - a rude or vulgar fool
fucker - a stupid despised man
bozo, cuckoo, fathead, goof, goofball, jackass, twat, zany, goose - a man who is a stupid incompetent fool
meshuggeneh, meshuggener - (Yiddish) a crazy fool
morosoph - a learned fool
putz - (Yiddish) a fool; an idiot
simpleton, simple - a person lacking intelligence or common sense
wally - a silly and inept person; someone who is regarded as stupid
2.foolfool - a person who is gullible and easy to take advantage of
dupe, victim - a person who is tricked or swindled
3.foolfool - a professional clown employed to entertain a king or nobleman in the Middle Ages
merry andrew, buffoon, clown, goof, goofball - a person who amuses others by ridiculous behavior
Verb1.fool - make a fool or dupe of
cozen, deceive, delude, lead on - be false to; be dishonest with
2.fool - spend frivolously and unwisely; "Fritter away one's inheritance"
ware, squander, consume, waste - spend extravagantly; "waste not, want not"
3.fool - fool or hoax; "The immigrant was duped because he trusted everyone"; "You can't fool me!"
kid, pull the leg of - tell false information to for fun; "Are you pulling my leg?"
deceive, lead astray, betray - cause someone to believe an untruth; "The insurance company deceived me when they told me they were covering my house"
4.fool - indulge in horseplay; "Enough horsing around--let's get back to work!"; "The bored children were fooling about"
jest, joke - tell a joke; speak humorously; "He often jokes even when he appears serious"
play - be at play; be engaged in playful activity; amuse oneself in a way characteristic of children; "The kids were playing outside all day"; "I used to play with trucks as a little girl"

fool
noun 1. simpleton, idiot, mug Brit. (slang) berk Brit. (slang) charlie Brit. (informal) silly, goose (informal) dope (informal) jerk (slang), chiefly U.S., Canad. dummy (slang) ass U.S., Canad. (taboo) clot Brit. (informal) plank Brit. (slang) sap (slang) wally (slang) illiterate, prat (slang) plonker (slang) coot, moron, nit (informal) git Brit. (slang) geek (slang) twit (informal), chiefly Brit. bonehead (slang) chump (informal) dunce, imbecile (informal) loon, clod, cretin, oaf, bozo U.S. (slang) dullard, dimwit (informal) ignoramus, dumbo (slang) jackass, dipstick Brit. (slang) gonzo (slang) schmuck U.S. (slang) dork (slang) nitwit (informal) dolt, blockhead, ninny, divvy Brit. (slang) bird-brain (informal) pillock Brit. (slang) halfwit, nincompoop, dweeb U.S. (slang) putz U.S. (slang) fathead (informal) weenie U.S. (informal) schlep U.S. (slang) eejit Scot., Irish dumb-ass (slang) pea-brain (slang) dunderhead, numpty Scot. (informal) doofus (slang), chiefly U.S. lamebrain (informal) mooncalf, thickhead, clodpate (archaic) nerd or nurd (slang) numbskull or numskull, twerp or twirp (informal) dorba or dorb Austral. (slang) bogan Austral. (slang) << OPPOSITE genius
noun 2. dupe, butt, mug Brit. (slang) sucker (slang) gull (archaic) stooge (slang) laughing stock, pushover (informal) fall guy (informal) chump (informal) greenhorn (informal) easy mark (informal)
noun 3. jester, comic, clown, harlequin, motley, buffoon, pierrot, court jester, punchinello, joculator or (fem.) joculatrix, merry-andrew
verb 4. deceive, cheat, mislead, delude, kid (informal) trick, take in, con (informal) stiff (slang) have (someone) on, bluff, hoax, dupe, beguile, gull (archaic) swindle, make a fool of, bamboozle, hoodwink, take for a ride (informal) put one over on (informal) play a trick on, pull a fast one on (informal)
fool around with something (Informal) play around with, play with, tamper with, toy with, mess around with, meddle with, trifle with, fiddle around with (informal) monkey around with
Translations
Spanish fool [fuːl] ntonto/a;
(CULIN) → mousse m de frutas
vtengañar;
to make a fool of o.s. → ponerse en ridículo;
you can't fool me → a mí no me engañas see also April Fool's Day
fool about, fool around vihacer el tonto

French fool [fuːl] nidiot(e);
(History) [of king]; bouffon m, fou m;
(Culin) → mousse f de fruits
vtberner, duper
vi (also: fool around) → faire l'idiot or l'imbécile;
to make a fool of sb (= ridicule) → ridiculiser qn (= trick); avoir or duper qn;
to make a fool of o.s. → se couvrir de ridicule;
you can't fool me → vous (ne) me la ferez pas, on (ne) me la fait pas
fool about, fool around vi (pej) (= waste time); traînailler, glandouiller: (= behave foolishly); faire l'idiot or l'imbécile

German fool [fuːl] nDummkopf m;
(Culin) → Sahnespeise aus Obstpüree
vthereinlegen, täuschen
viherumalbern;
to make a fool of sb → jdn lächerlich machen;
(trick) → jdn hereinlegen;
to make a fool of o.s. → sich blamieren;
you can't fool me → du kannst mich nicht zum Narren halten
fool about fool (pej) viherumtrödeln;
(behave foolishly) → herumalbern
fool around fool vi = fool about

Italian fool [fuːl] nsciocco/a;
(HISTORY) [of king] → buffone m;
(CULIN) → frullato
vtingannare
vi (gen): fool around → fare lo sciocco;
to make a fool of sb → prendere in giro qn;
to make a fool of o.s → coprirsi di ridicolo;
you can't fool me → non mi inganna
fool about, fool around vi (= waste time) → perdere tempo

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``It was OK with them,'' said Easley, who first came looking for a place to act the fool without being worried about the reaction.
 
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