In "The Princess and the Pea," the word preposterous means something that is absurd or unreasonable, such as the idea that a real princess would be so sensitive to a pea hidden under multiple mattresses. The word is used to emphasize the exaggerated nature of the princess's delicate nature in the story.
The forms for the adjective are:preposterousmore preposterousmost preposterous
The idea was so preposterous it was unlikely to have been invented.
Preposterous.
ridiculous
It was preposterous of them to think that I would pay their bill without questioning the added charges.
Words that are not synonymous with the word 'preposterous' include:appropriatecorrectfairjustlogicalproperrationalreasonablesensiblesoundtruevalid
no such word you tool. but if you mean preposterous then you spell it p.r.e.p.o.s.t.e.r.o.u.s.
preposterous
no, similar to preposterous, strange
Preposterous is an adjective and may refer to something that is not within reason or that is absurd. Something that is preposterous is contrary to nature, reason or sense.
Popestrous isn't in the English dictionary. The word preposterous is and it means absurd, contrary to reason, nature, or common sense.
it can be a name but the is first mean"princess