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ingenuous
/ ÉŖ²ŌĖ»åĻōɲŌĀįŹÉ²õ /
adjective
naive, artless, or innocent
candid; frank; straightforward
Confusables Note
Other 51³Ō¹Ļ Forms
- ingenuously adverb
- ingenuousness noun
- half-ingenuous adjective
- half-ingenuously adverb
- half-ingenuousness noun
- ¾±²Ō˲µ±š²Ō³Ü“dzܲõ²Ō±š²õ²õ noun
- ¾±²Ō˲µ±š²Ō³Ü“dzܲõ±ō²ā adverb
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of ingenuous1
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of ingenuous1
Example Sentences
She was a "simple-minded, naĆÆve, ingenuous girl", according to her first report.
His greatest hope for the future, Meghan is a high school senior at a horsy boarding school in the Washington area and possibly the most ingenuous girl since Alice in Wonderland.
All of this feels rather random, rather personal, rather ingenuous.
Even in the happiest times heād made fun of my California accent, my secondhand overcoat and my room barren of tasteful bibelots, but in such an ingenuous way I couldnāt possibly do anything but laugh.
Wide-eyed and ingenuous, the character is a blank slate.
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When To Use
Ingenious means clever or cleverly inventive or resourceful. Ingenuous means sincere or, perhaps more commonly, naive or innocent.Careful: ingenious sounds like genius (the two are often used in the same contexts and even come from the same root) but itās not spelled ingenius.Ingenious is most often used in the context of ideas, inventions, and solutions considered clever for their inventiveness and resourcefulness. The related noun ingenuity refers to the quality of being ingeniousācleverness or inventiveness.Ingenuous, on the other hand, is most commonly used to describe peopleātypically people considered naive or overly trusting, especially due to a lack of real-world experience. The related noun ¾±²Ō²µĆ©²Ō³Ü±š refers to a young, inexperienced person.The adjective disingenuous is more commonly used than ingenuous and means insincere or falsely ingenuousāsomeone whoās described as disingenuous might be faking naivetĆ©.Once upon a time, ingenious was used to mean ingenuous, but this is no longer the case.To remember the difference, remember that ingenious sounds like genius and is used in similar contextsāan ingenious idea might also be described as a genius idea. Just donāt forget the -ous ending in ingenious.The middle of ingenuous sounds like the beginning of genuine, and an ingenuous person is usually a genuine oneānothing about them is insincere or intended to hide who they really are.Hereās an example of ingenuous and ingenious used correctly in a sentence.Example: The ingenuous inventor signed away the rights to his ingenious new creation without realizing it.Want to learn more? Read the full breakdown of the difference between ingenuous and ingenious.
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