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unridiculous 

“Unridiculous” is a portmanteau of “unbelievable” and “ridiculous” coined by Clint D. during a frustrating phone conversation with a Chinese restaurant over an incorrect order. It refers to a combination of frustration, severe disbelief, and confusion. (The term may have originated from "UN-believable," a common saying of a coworker with a long emphasis on the first syllable and with similar meaning.) Mimicking this confusion started as a joke, but the term has come into serious usage among his ~100 coworkers and possibly beyond.
I have to work Saturday AND Sunday? This is unridiculous.
unridiculous by kevinthenerd November 21, 2010
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unridiculous 

Unridiculous is when something is not ridiculous, funny and is just plain serious. However, in its opposivity, it is ridiculous in the way it sounds thus making it a double-entendre.
Megan Fox is so hot, it's unridiculous.
unridiculous by pete418 July 23, 2009

Undiculous 

When the situation is ridiculous, but not funny.
Larry the cable guy is just....undiculous.
Undiculous by Devadander90 July 2, 2008

undiculous 

completely NOT ridiculous.
ALSO
completely ridiculous.
It's totally undiculous that I'm here.
I can't believe how undiculous this situation is.
You're freaking undiculous.
undiculous by P Mini January 18, 2006

unridiculouslybelievable 

Bobby: Did you see the set of cans on that one?
Bill: Unridiculouslybelievable!

undiculous 

ridiculous is based on the word ridicule, however phoenetically, it sounds as if one is "diculous again." Diculous would be worthy of kudos or worthy of "being dicked down". Therefore, it stands to reason that undiculous is just very uncool, or repulsive, unworthy of "being dicked down"
The way you are acting is totally undiculous!
undiculous by Lani Kay January 1, 2010

Undiculous 

Unbelievably ridiculous. The phrase has a double meaning intended, in that you can tell someone what they are telling you to do is unbelievably ridiculous without risking their direct anger because you didn't exactly say "unbelievably ridiculous". If they ask you what it means because they perceive insult, you can say it means "not ridiculous" as in "That's not ridiculous," which they can then interpret as a statement of compliance with their directive. It can be believed by the: principal, teacher, boss who gave you the task, while your friends know you are criticizing a superior whom you must do what they tell you, but have a habit of telling you to do things that are unbelievably ridiculous.

It must be used in an agreeable tone.
"You want me to take the bottom bits out of the deep fryer and mix it into the soup after separating out the black parts by hand and throwing them away first?"

"Yeah, we can squeeze three more bowls of profit out of this batch that way without having to spend more money on ingredients. The customers say the soup is really filling when we do that."

That's undiculous!"
Undiculous by GriffinHawk April 9, 2011