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credulous

This word is more formal than "gullible." While both mean that someone believes things too easily, "credulous" is often used in writing or professional contexts. It usually carries a negative tone because it suggests a lack of critical thinking or a failure to be skeptical when necessary.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon, Sarah is on her third coffee break while David is in a boardroom.
David Smith

Just saw a pitch for AI-powered socks. I'm thinking of buying into it.

David Smith
Sarah
Sarah

Stop being so credulous and just get back to the spreadsheet.

💡
Sarah uses 'credulous' to criticize David's gullibility regarding a ridiculous business pitch. She pairs this with a blunt command to return to work, highlighting their strained manager-subordinate dynamic where she is the more grounded of the two.

Meanings

adjective

Having or showing too great a readiness to believe things; gullible.

"The con artist preyed on credulous investors who believed his promises of overnight wealth."

Last Updated: May 22, 2026Report an Error