ingenuous

Naive and trusting.

Adjective

  1. Naive and trusting.
  2. Demonstrating childlike simplicity.
    • "Do you mean to say you didn't leave your wife for another woman?" "Of course not." "On your word of honour?" I don't know why I asked for that. It was very ingenuous of me. - 1919, W[illiam] Somerset Maugham, “ch. 12”,...
  3. Unsophisticated; clumsy or obvious.
    • The apparent contradictions in his behaviour should therefore be discounted as ingenuous attempts to extricate himself from the consequences of an intellectual position which he once adopted but was never really his by...
    • […] Semitic agitation by stating 'the truth' in terms of facts and figures, the practice of self-criticism represented a well-intended but ingenuous effort to defend Jewry against anti-Semitism. - 1978, G. Lebzelter,...
    • There was nothing more I dared say. My ingenuous attempts to lie my way out of trouble had only served to get me in deeper and deeper. - 2012, Hester Rowan, The Linden Tree:
  4. Unable to mask one's feelings.
  5. Straightforward, candid, open, frank.
    • [H]is Grace’s Man at his club, in company doubtless with other Men of equal social rank, talks over his master’s character and affairs with the ingenuous truthfulness which befits gentlemen who are met together in...

Origin

Learned borrowing from Latin ingenuus (“of noble character, frank”). Doublet of ingenu.

Forms

more ingenuous most ingenuous

Antonyms

disingenuous

Related

ingenue ingénue ingenu ingénu

Derived

ingenuously ingenuousness uningenuous