A person who is not very bright.
Sinônimos
Examples for "stupid"
Examples for "stupid"
1His surprise made him stupid; he was in an abyss of astonishment.
2The dull reviewer has two varieties: the stupid and the merely dull.
3The men are remarkably idle and stupid; they are tawny and lean.
4The more stupid the peasant, the better does the horse understand him.
5He looked me full in the face with stupid insolence, and said:
1The man is a dolt, but he tries to tell the truth.
2Perhaps he might not be the absolute dolt that Hurrell pronounced him.
3She limped, the dolt, but all the same she had some pluck.
4A dolt you've always been, else you had not asked the question.
5There he gently cursed himself for a fool, a dolt, an idiot.
1The wisdom of a million fools in the diction of a dullard.
2Hues charming and fair may move the wise and not the dullard.
3How in God's name did you come to marry such a dullard?
4He must be a dullard indeed who fails to understand their symbolism.
5Not a whit more than that dullard knew a million years ago.
1I mean, apart from being a pillock, it just demonstrates his ignorance.
2Just don't be a complete gung-ho pillock this time, will you?
3Morgan can be a prime-grade pillock, but Lee was set on affirming himself as gold-leafed wagyu.
4Get into the blackhawk, you little pillock, or we'll send you right back into the beyond again.
5She looked at him like he was a pillock and rather impolitely failed to suppress a laugh.
1The stupid person is a poor joke, the clever, a good one.
2He gives the impression of being an unusually stupid person and a reptile.
3Do you expect that the honest, stupid person will judge thus?
4And you are doing a great impression of a stupid person.
5In a zombie movie, this is the way the stupid person gets bitten.
1"But, just the same, that policeman is a pudding head," he added, loudly.
1You get on with your work and don't bother your pudden head about what ain't in no way your business.
1He was a poor fish, Gashwiler; a country storekeeper without a future.
2We have only sixteen opposition members in the House-andthey're poor fish.
3The poor fish claps his hand to his forehead and cries 'Gadzooks!
4That's how it seemed to the poor fish by this time-hishonour!
5The thing that matters is that you are talking piffle, you poor fish.
1For the pain, mustard poultices, turpentine stupe or hot fomentations prove beneficial.
2The old stupe is still alive at Petersfield, and as pompous-headed as ever.
3He is nothing but a very soft-natured stupe.
4Maybe I can't write much more than my own fuckin name, but I ain't no stupe.'
5Put a towel over the stupe.
6What did I tell you, stupe?
7A turpentine stupe is now to be used, prepared as follows: Place a tin cup containing the turpentine in a vessel containing hot water.
8Mustard Stupe.-Puta tablespoonful of mustard in one pint of hot water.
9Stupes of hot Potato water are very serviceable in some forms of rheumatism.
10For local pains, fomentations, stupes and poultices are used.
11Turpentine stupes are frequently used in abdominal inflammation, for flatulence and for bloating in typhoid fever.
12"Everybody is a stupe but not Morris Bober."
13"'Stupe' being short for stupendous, not 'stupid'."
14The treatment consists in enveloping the limb in turpentine stupes, followed by the application of poultices to the groin and a light diet at first.
15"Go back home, of course, stupe," put in Dorothy, "do you have to be told every little thing?"
16"What a pair of stupes we must be to go on so!" he cried, with a couple of bright guineas in his hand.