George Ruggle has written: 'Ignoramus'
An ignoramus is an ignorant, stupid person. The opposite would be a very smart person. An example of the opposite of an ignoramus would be a genius.
It is not very nice to call someone an ignoramus. It may not be nice, but I think she is more of an ignoramus than a genius.
The plural word for "ignoramus" is "ignoramuses".You might expect it to be "ignorami" because the word originates in Latin, but "ignoramus" is not a noun: it is a verb. So instead of using the Latin rule for pluralizing nouns, we simply use the English rule for pluralizing words that end with an "s".Thus, "ignoramus" becomes "ignoramuses".
almost famous
ignoramus
How about ignorant or ignorable.
The ignoramus kept calling out in class at random.
Michel Jacobs has written: 'The art of composition' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Composition (Art) 'Epigramus of an ignoramus' -- subject(s): Artists, Correspondence, reminiscences 'Colour in landscape painting' -- subject(s): Color, Landscape painting 'Portrait painting' -- subject(s): Portrait painting
that perosn is ignorant Thos people are ignorent the word stays the same, just spoken in a different contex
Idiot, moron, fool
The ones that die. THEY ALL DIE YOU DIRTY IGNORAMUS!