lu·di·crous /ˈludəkrəs/
(a.)可笑的,滑稽的,荒唐的
Lu·di·crous a.
1. Adapted to excite laughter, without scorn or contempt; sportive.
A chapter upon German rhetoric would be in the same ludicrous predicament as Van Troil's chapter on the snakes of Iceland, which delivers its business in one summary sentence, announcing, that snakes in Iceland -- there are none. --De Quincey.
Syn: -- Laughable; sportive; burlesque; comic; droll; ridiculous.
Usage: -- Ludicrous, Laughable, Ridiculous. We speak of a thing as ludicrous when it tends to produce laughter; as laughable when the impression is somewhat stronger; as ridiculous when more or less contempt is mingled with the merriment created.
-- Lu*di*crous*ly, adv. -- Lu*di*crous*ness, n.
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ludicrous
adj 1: broadly or extravagantly humorous; resembling farce; "the
wild farcical exuberance of a clown"; "ludicrous green
hair" [syn: farcical, ridiculous]
2: completely devoid of wisdom or good sense; "the absurd
excuse that the dog ate his homework"; "that's a cockeyed
idea"; "ask a nonsensical question and get a nonsensical
answer"; "a contribution so small as to be laughable"; "it
is ludicrous to call a cottage a mansion"; "a preposterous
attempt to turn back the pages of history"; "her conceited
assumption of universal interest in her rather dull
children was ridiculous" [syn: absurd, cockeyed, derisory,
idiotic, laughable, nonsensical, preposterous, ridiculous]