Word: IDIOT

The word IDIOT has appeared in at least 114 clues on different crosswords.

Clue(s)
Dimwit
Blockhead
Doofus
Knucklehead
Person who's no brainiac
Fool
Dimwit
Birdbrain
Dostoyevsky title character
Village celebrity?
Dostoyevsky novel, with "The"
Nitwit
Genius's opposite
"Our ___ Brother" (2011 Paul Rudd movie)
Village celebrity?
Fool
Blockhead
No-brainer?
Dummkopf
Not exactly a brainiac
Foolish person
Jerk
Nitwit
Dunderhead
Hardly a brainiac
Mensa member's opposite
Fool
Not the sharpest knife in the drawer
Fool
Green Day "Don't want to be an American ___"
"Our ___ Brother" 2011 Paul Rudd comedy,
Chucklehead
___ box (disparaging name for TV)
Hardly an Einstein
Sharp-as-a-marble sort
Blockhead
Dumb cluck
Dostoyevsky novel, with "The"
Nitwit
Blockhead
Nitwit
Epithet uttered by Napoleon Dynamite
Blockhead
Moron
Big dummy
One who tells a tale full of sound and fury, per Macbeth
"American ___" (Grammy-winning Green Day album)
Nitwit
Dimwit
Fool
Simpleton
Simpleton
Nitwit
__-proof: easy to operate
Peabrain
Numbskull
Fool
Fool
Bonehead
Nitwit
Fyodor Dostoyevsky novel, with "The"
__ light
Meathead
Blockhead
Person who's not smart at all
Green Day "Don't want to be an American ___"
Word before box or savant
Dimwit
One with little intelligence
"American ___" (rock musical based on a Green Day album)
Village celebrity?
One may be complete
Village celebrity?
Fool
Facetious target of a series of guides
Foolish person
Nitwit
"Canadian ___" ("Weird Al" Yankovic parody of a Green Day song)
Dimwit
Doofus
Fool
Bozo
Einstein's opposite
Blockhead
Dimwit
Word from the Greek for ''skill-less person''
Buffoon
Nitwit
"Einstein," sarcastically
Jerk
Blockhead
Dostoyevsky's Prince Myshkin, so the book title declares
No-brainer?
Nitwit
Dostoyevsky novel, with "The"
One with little intelligence
"American ___" (Green Day song)
Nitwit
Pinhead
Fool
"American ___" (Grammy-winning Green Day album)
Halfwit
Dostoyevsky novel, with "The"
Fool
"It is a tale told by an ___, full of sound and fury": Shak.
Blockhead
Moron
Dimwit
Dimwit
Turkey
Village celebrity?
Dostoyevsky novel, with "The"
Fool
Fool