by evan maroney January 17, 2008

Hey Austin, just give me the 50,000 foot view (or any other ridiculous distance) on where we are getting the rams rodded!
by phdeed2015 June 21, 2018

Well it basically a saying i just made up, about how there those people who keep jumping to the latest social network.
friend 1 - I think Imma get a facebook now, since everyone seems to be getting one
friend 2 - yea me too
friend 3 - yea myspace is so last year
friend who doesn't give a fuck - "I'm trying to keep in touch with friends, not ridicules trends, stay on one social network site you fools"
friend 2 - yea me too
friend 3 - yea myspace is so last year
friend who doesn't give a fuck - "I'm trying to keep in touch with friends, not ridicules trends, stay on one social network site you fools"
by Evoslip April 25, 2009

A portmanteau of ridiculous and molecule, Meaning a connection of separate but interconnected pseudo scientific beliefs drawing ridiculous conclusions.
by arz131 May 18, 2024

A facebook smiley that is clearly ridiculous and unnecessarily oversized; usually required when #TOGM is in full effect.
by ryzyn June 11, 2014

Ridiculative (adjective) —
Definition (proposed for the Oxford Dictionary):
Describing something that causes or expresses ridicule; intended to mock, satirize, or make someone or something appear laughable.
Definition (proposed for the Oxford Dictionary):
Describing something that causes or expresses ridicule; intended to mock, satirize, or make someone or something appear laughable.
Example:
The comedian’s ridiculative impression of the mayor had the entire crowd laughing.
Etymology:
Formed from ridicule + -ative, following the pattern of adjectives like demonstrative or indicative.
Would you like me to refine it to sound more “dictionary-official” (like an actual Oxford entry with pronunciation and part-of-speech formatting)?
The comedian’s ridiculative impression of the mayor had the entire crowd laughing.
Etymology:
Formed from ridicule + -ative, following the pattern of adjectives like demonstrative or indicative.
Would you like me to refine it to sound more “dictionary-official” (like an actual Oxford entry with pronunciation and part-of-speech formatting)?
by Jerbyman October 7, 2025

The above definition is laden with ridiculity.
by bread infection November 23, 2009
