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[ US /ˈpætsi/ ]
[ UK /pˈætsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person who is gullible and easy to take advantage of

How To Use patsy In A Sentence

  • The amount they have in savings: ‘All the money I saved for when I get ready to retire is up yonder now at the hospital, and the doctors,’ Patsy says.
  • She too becomes a zombie, though that's not a bad thing because along with the putrefaction comes a dramatic rise in Patsy's sex appeal.
  • His parents Paul and Patsy, twin brother Michael and fiancee Chantelle described him as "home-loving and full of fun".
  • February 12th, 2009 at 9: 54 pm dunkin kindler – because the Putins of the world didn’t already conclude George W. Bush was a patsy. Matthew Yglesias » Judd Gregg Fail
  • Martin Wolf of the Financial Times once told me that the self-interested, strategic economic behaviors of other major economic stakeholders in the international system required a "patsy" -- someone who would believe in the "just-in-time" security of give-and-take trade and give-and-take finance and jobs, even when its competitors didn't. Steve Clemons: Eva Peron Wins: The Pretension of a 'Savings Lottery'
  • The average guy who buys a mutual fund is not an investor at all; he's a chump, a patsy, a schmuck.
  • He says it were a set-up, that Kev was played for a patsy... Kev got money... ` IN REMEMBRANCE OF ROSE
  • The latter was fiercely jealous, and if Parsons showed obvious affection toward someone, Patsy howled as though she were calling upon all her lupine ancestors to come forth and carry off the intruder.
  • Davy was a very popular man locally and he is survived by his wife Patsy and four children.
  • Why, don't you know, Patsy," replied his friend, "that it manes our party have made a clane swape of the cowld-wather men? From Wealth to Poverty
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