Credulous vs Ostensible - What's the difference?
credulous | ostensible |
Excessively ready to believe things; gullible.
(obsolete) Believed too readily.
Apparent, evident; meant for open display.
* 1956–1960 , (second edition, 1960), chapter ii: “Motives and Motivation”, page 32:
* '>citation
Appearing as such; being such in appearance; professed, supposed (rather than demonstrably true or real).
As adjectives the difference between credulous and ostensible
is that credulous is excessively ready to believe things; gullible while ostensible is apparent, evident; meant for open display.credulous
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Derived terms
* credulously * credulousnessSynonyms
* naive, unworldly * See also:Antonyms
* incredulousReferences
* (etymology)ostensible
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Motives, of course, may be mixed; but this only means that a man aims at a variety of goals by means of the same course of action. Similarly a man may have a strong motive or a weak one, an ulterior motive or an ostensible one.
- In witch-trials the conflict was officially defined as between the accused and God, or between the accused and the Catholic (later Protestant) church, as God's earthly representative. [...]
Behind the ostensible conflict of the witch-trial lay the usual conflicts of social class, values, and human relationships.
- The ostensible reason for his visit to New York was to see his mother, but the real reason was to get to the Yankees game the next day.