naïveté
naivety, ingenuousness
noun nah-eev-TEH Rare
Origin: From naïf/naïve + -eté, from Latin nativus (native, natural).
Usage Note
Naïveté can be affectionate (childlike openness) or critical (foolish gullibility), depending on context. It passed directly into English as 'naivety.' The related adjective naïf (masculine) / naïve (feminine) keeps its diaeresis to signal that the aï is two syllables. Avec naïveté means naively.
Examples
"Sa naïveté le rendait vulnérable aux arnaques."
Natural Translation
His naivety made him vulnerable to scams.
Related Words
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