| adjektiv |
| 1. |
naive - marked by or showing unaffected simplicity and lack of guile or worldly experience; "a teenager's naive ignorance of life"; "the naive assumption that things can only get better"; "this naive simple creature with wide friendly eyes so eager to believe appearances" |
| |
|
naif |
| |
|
sophisticated intellectually appealing; "a sophisticated drama"
|
| |
|
credulous disposed to believe on little evidence; "the gimmick would convince none but the most credulous"
|
| |
|
uninformed not informed; lacking in knowledge or information; "the uninformed public"
|
| |
|
unworldly not concerned with the temporal world or swayed by mundane considerations; "was unworldly and did not greatly miss worldly rewards"- Sheldon Cheney
|
| |
|
childlike,
dewy-eyed,
round-eyed,
simple,
wide-eyed befitting a young child; "childlike charm"
|
| |
|
credulous disposed to believe on little evidence; "the gimmick would convince none but the most credulous"
|
| |
|
fleeceable,
green,
gullible naive and easily deceived or tricked; "at that early age she had been gullible and in love"
|
| |
|
ingenuous,
innocent characterized by an inability to mask your feelings; not devious; "an ingenuous admission of responsibility"
|
| |
|
simple-minded lacking subtlety and insight; "a simple-minded argument"
|
| |
|
unsophisticated,
unworldly not wise in the ways of the world; "either too unsophisticated or too honest to promise more than he could deliver"; "this helplessly unworldly woman"- Kate O'Brien
|
| 2. |
naive - inexperienced |
| |
|
innate,
unconditioned,
unlearned not established by conditioning or learning; "an unconditioned reflex"
|