A pompous fool.
Sometimes vulgar; a stupid, obstinate, or perverse person — often compounded with a preceding adjective
1. An illicit, habit-forming, or narcotic drug; especially; marijuana
2. A preparation given to a racehorse to help or hinder its performance
3. chiefly Southern; a cola drink
4. A stupid person
1. An exercising weight; two spheres connected by a short bar that serves as a handle.
2. An ignorant or foolish person; SYN. dummy, dope, boob, booby, pinhead. dumb-bell, dumb bell
1. A figure representing the human form.
2. A person who does not talk; SYN. silent person.
ETYM French idiot, Latin idiota an uneducated, ignorant, ill-informed person, Greek idioths, also and orig., a private person, not holding public office, from idios proper, peculiar. Related to Idiom.
A person of subnormal intelligence; SYN. imbecile, cretin, moron, changeling, half-wit, retard.
1. One of feeble mind.
2. An idiot.
A conceited dolt; a perverse blockhead.
ETYM Spanish.
1. A mentally deficient person.
2. An idiot; a stupid person.
1. Inepte.
2. Bête.
1. Lacking the human power of speech
2. of a person , often offensive; lacking the ability to speak
3. Temporarily unable to speak (as from shock or astonishment)
4. Not expressed in uttered words
5. Silent; also; Taciturn
6. Lacking some usual attribute or accompaniment; especially; having no means of self-propulsion
7. Lacking intelligence; stupid
8. Showing a lack of intelligence
9. Requiring no intelligence
10. Not having the capability to process data — compare intelligent
Stupid; pertaining to idiocy.
Having a mental age of between eight and twelve years.
ETYM Latin stupidus, from stupere to be stupefied: cf. French stupide.
Lacking or marked by lack of intellectual acuity.
1. Débile mental.
2. Étourdi.