We have no meanings for "naïveté" in our records yet.
1 This required courage as well as naïveté ; and it required strength, too.
2 Regrettably, being merely young has never guaranteed me an aura of naïveté .
3 The naïveté of the first glance often takes the prize from scholarship.
4 It shows a certain weakness of character, a naïveté , if you will.
5 He almost disarmed criticism by the gaiety, the naïveté of the pursuit.
6 This kind of naïveté is irresponsible, reckless-theDisapproving Docs are right!-almostinexcusable.
7 The naïveté of this statement was quite lost upon the eager speaker.
8 The naïveté of this last question brings up insistently a perplexing problem.
9 We owe to this quality the almost unique naïveté of our poetry.
10 The deductions of her philosophy are often characterised by an astonishing naïveté .
11 Once people have questioned an authority their faith has lost its naïveté .
12 The mix of naïveté and worldly adolescent disgust touched something in him.
13 At least he had lost some of his naïveté and taken back control.
14 Morelli had a long history of taking advantage of my naïveté .
15 In general, naïveté attracts, while anything that is unnatural everywhere repels.
16 They will sometimes say things that hurt others out of ignorance or naïveté .
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Naïveté across language varieties