No, it is an adjective. The adverb form is ridiculously.
"Ridiculously" is an adverb in the phrase "ridiculously easy test." It modifies the adjective "easy" to emphasize the extreme simplicity of the test.
The word 'ridiculously' is the adverb form of the adjective 'ridiculous'.The noun form of the adjective 'ridiculous' is ridiculousness.The word 'ridiculous' is the adjective form of the noun ridicule.The word ridicule is also a verb.
Main Entry: humorously Part of Speech: adverb Definition: comically Synonyms: absurdly, amusingly, facetiously, ironically, jocosely, jokingly, jovially, ludicrously, merrily, mirthfully, playfully, ridiculously, satirically
naturally, elegantly, unnervingly, impressively, staggeringly, strangely, devastatingly, ridiculously, worryingly... the list is almost endless. Your question needs amending. What is the context? Are you describing a man, woman, machine, nature, event, emotion etc
it means ridiculously
its never gonna happen, its impossible. "its ridiculously implausible that pigs could ever fly"
it means ridiculously
That is the correct spelling of "ridicules" (makes fun of). The adjective form of the word is "ridiculous" (absurd, silly).
The cast of The Ridiculously Awesome Show - 2009 includes: Marc Wondolowski as Various
Yes, ridiculously so.
Ridiculously high
Ridiculously.