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moronic

[ UK /mɔːɹˈɒnɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having a mental age of between eight and twelve years

How To Use moronic In A Sentence

  • So why has Polly come up with what is, even by her notoriously moronic standards, an outstandingly hopeless argument?
  • Her face turns paler, she stutters a bit and then finally she leaves with her stupid, moronic girlfriends.
  • It was so stupid, so frustrating, so embarrassingly moronic, that it made her want to tear her hair out.
  • As their name suggests, ‘romances of real life’ denote a self-consciously oxymoronic genre.
  • It has always amazed me how moronic the planning authorities are when they sanction building on natural flood plains.
  • The computer is not used as a genius assigned moronic tasks of accumulating data for the sheer electronic thrill of it.
  • What on earth the referee had done to incur such mindless, moronic abuse, one can only hazard a guess.
  • The seat of government is a long, self-imposing, hubristic strip of robber-baron parthenons, built, oxymoronically, like banks and temples. Times, Sunday Times
  • Criticize the moronic politics and you get a sermon about not reducing works of art to a simplistic set of objective declarations.
  • Here, the notion of a groundbreaking or experimental pop single seems oxymoronic.
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