naivety means naïveté Lexicurio rates it Distinctive — a strength score of 60 out of 100.
Why this word is great
NAIVETY — [Noun] The state of being naive; innocence or lack of experience, judgment, or worldly wisdom. From naive (borrowed from French naïf, from Latin nativus "natural, innate") + -ity (English suffix forming nouns), analogous to French naïveté (naïf + -eté). Unlike "innocence" (which carries moral purity) or "guilelessness" (which suggests an absence of deception), naivety is the unguarded openness of one who has not yet learned to distrust. It is the child who believes a stranger’s promise, the lover who takes vows at face value, or the idealist who still thinks fairness is the default state of the world—a fragile, fleeting condition, as beautiful as it is doomed.