Yes
more ridiculous, most ridiculous
more ridiculous
It's a ridiculous hair cut and he wants a refund.It's a ridiculous argument and no one will win.Her story is ridiculous and I don't believe it.It's a ridiculous price but he bought it anyway.
more ridiculous
No. Asinine means ridiculous, foolish or stupid. Astringent as an adjective means tart, styptic, or caustic. Someone's remarks could conceivably be both astringent and asinine.
That idea is simply ridiculous. Simply is the adverb, and ridiculous is the adjective.
"Ridiculous" is an adjective. It is used to describe something as comically absurd or illogical.
ridiculous
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.
Adjective, and it will always be one.
adjective
The correct spelling of the adjective is "absurd" (ridiculous, inane).
The opposite of silly could be sensible, practical, serious, or profound.
The usual spelling of the slang adjective is "cockamamie" (meaning ridiculous or far-fetched).
The spelling is "ridiculous" (silly, foolish).
No, ludicrous is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The noun form is ludicrousness.
'Preposterous' is an adjective. It 'describes' a noun. For example: "That idea is preposterous!" The 'idea' is the noun, and 'preposterous' is describing it.