dullard

IPA: dˈʌɫɝd

noun

  • A stupid person; a fool.
  • A surname.
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Examples of "dullard" in Sentences

  • The dullard acted really slow.
  • The men called the retard dullard.
  • It empowers dullards and gelds the creative.
  • We don't have to pretend we're literal dullards.
  • An encyclopedia is based on evidence you dullard.
  • Would he not be like one called a dullard or a clod?
  • In the Shiji, he criticized one of his sons for being a dullard.
  • We are writing for the reader of average intellect, not the dullard.
  • Furthermore, havng a below average IQ does not make one a "dullard".
  • Membership in this category does not imply that the figure 'was' a dullard.
  • This is revealing but somewhat disillusioning to a math dullard such as me.
  • At that time it really meant 'square', 'dullard', unpopular, or boring person.
  • Farmer's definition of a "dullard" ought to be enough, all on its own, to grant him admission to anywhere he wants to be.
  • They were ok with Bush and his horrific policies (a dullard is their perfect candidate, see Palin) but Obama is just too different for them.
  • Lou Ford is the kind of dullard you do anything to avoid --- he spouts the most inane cliches, he's Mr. Hearty to one and all, he's so damn friendly and boring he drives everybody crazy.
  • "Despite the fact that for nigh on 10 years Dylan's been writing songs that deal in Americana clichés there seems little danger of him regressing into some kind of dullard purism like, say, Van Morrison."
  • Austin is a gracious host and you've got to be some kind of dullard to have a bad time when everywhere you go there is free booze and free rock and roll. (sick people notwithstanding: my poor travel mate Jenna)
  • Thus, a fellow with a low forehead and a weakly receding chin, Kerry classified as a dullard, a witling, unaware that if the brow were but low enough and the chin virtually absent altogether he might stand in the presence of a second Daniel.
  • To Swinburne, as he says, the distinction between books and life is but a 'dullard's distinction,' and it may justly be said of him that it is with an equal instinct and an equal enthusiasm that he is drawn to whatever in nature, in men, in books, or in ideas is great, noble, and heroic.

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