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ludicrous
[ loo-di-kruhs ]
adjective
- causing laughter because of absurdity; provoking or deserving derision; ridiculous; laughable:
a ludicrous lack of efficiency.
Synonyms: farcical
ludicrous
/ ˈluːdɪkrəs /
adjective
- absurd or incongruous to the point of provoking ridicule or laughter
Derived Forms
- ˈludicrousness, noun
- ˈludicrously, adverb
Other Words From
- ludi·crous·ly adverb
- ludi·crous·ness noun
- un·ludi·crous adjective
- un·ludi·crous·ly adverb
- un·ludi·crous·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of ludicrous1
Word History and Origins
Origin of ludicrous1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
It's cheesy and ludicrous and, therefore, delightful; it's the reading equivalent of hate-watching.
Professor Penelope Leach told The Daily Beast it was ludicrous to monitor young children in that way.
When things reached the ludicrous crescendo of the finale—when neither story made sense—my heart sank.
There are those who accuse their games of not really being video games at all, which is ludicrous.
The fact that an entire interview was being conducted solely about his looks was ludicrous, yet this is the sort of thing that E!
And the girl, scarce believing her good fortune, departed with a speed that bordered on the ludicrous.
Even the simplest services are performed with an almost ludicrous waste of energy.
I met with a ludicrous instance of the dissipation of even latter days, a few months after my marriage.
In fact, to hear Skipper Worse utter the word Romarino was one of the most ludicrous things imaginable.
Mollock's discharge by the magistrate put the Chief in a very ludicrous position.
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