thick - meaning and definition. What is thick
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is thick - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Thick (disambiguation)

thick         
I
adj. (misc.) as thick as thieves ('very closely allied'); to lay it on thick ('to exaggerate')
II
n.
most intense part
in the thick (of the battle)
thick         
(thicker, thickest)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
Something that is thick has a large distance between its two opposite sides.
For breakfast I had a thick slice of bread and syrup...
This material is very thick and this needle is not strong enough to go through it.
? thin
ADJ
thickly
Slice the meat thickly.
ADV: ADV with v
2.
You can use thick to talk or ask about how wide or deep something is.
The folder was two inches thick...
How thick are these walls?
ADJ: n ADJ, how ADJ, amount ADJ, as ADJ as
Thick is also a combining form.
His life was saved by a quarter-inch-thick bullet-proof steel screen.
COMB in ADJ: ADJ n
thickness (thicknesses)
The size of the fish will determine the thickness of the steaks...
N-VAR: oft N of n, N of amount, amount in N
3.
If something that consists of several things is thick, it has a large number of them very close together.
She inherited our father's thick, wavy hair...
They walked through thick forest.
= dense
ADJ
thickly
I rounded a bend where the trees and brush grew thickly...
ADV: ADV after v, ADV -ed
4.
If something is thick with another thing, the first thing is full of or covered with the second.
The air is thick with acrid smoke from the fires...
ADJ: v-link ADJ with n
5.
Thick clothes are made from heavy cloth, so that they will keep you warm in cold weather.
In the winter she wears thick socks, Wellington boots and gloves...
? thin
ADJ
6.
Thick smoke, fog, or cloud is difficult to see through.
The smoke was bluish-black and thick...
ADJ
7.
Thick liquids are fairly stiff and solid and do not flow easily.
They had to battle through thick mud to reach construction workers...
ADJ
8.
If someone's voice is thick, they are not speaking clearly, for example because they are ill, upset, or drunk.
When he spoke his voice was thick with bitterness.
ADJ: usu v-link ADJ
thickly
'It's all my fault,' he mumbled thickly.
ADV: ADV after v
9.
A thick accent is very obvious and easy to identify.
He answered our questions in English but with a thick accent...
= strong
ADJ: usu ADJ n
10.
If you describe someone as thick, you think they are stupid. (BRIT INFORMAL)
How could she have been so thick?
= stupid
ADJ: usu v-link ADJ [disapproval]
11.
If things happen thick and fast, they happen very quickly and in large numbers.
The rumours have been coming thick and fast...
PHRASE: PHR after v
12.
If you are in the thick of an activity or situation, you are very involved in it.
I enjoy being in the thick of things...
PHRASE: PHR n, usu v-link PHR, PHR after v
13.
If you do something through thick and thin, you do it although the conditions or circumstances are very bad.
She'd stuck by Bob through thick and thin...
PHRASE: PHR after v
14.
a thick skin: see skin
thick         
I. a.
1.
Not thin (in measure).
2.
Dumpy, squab, squat, plump, bulky, solid.
3.
Dense.
4.
Dense, gross, inspissate, inspissated, grumous.
5.
Misty, cloudy, foggy, hazy, dirty, vaporous, vapory.
6.
Turbid, muddy, roiled.
7.
Abundant, frequent, numerous, multitudinous.
8.
Compact, crowded, close, closely set, dense.
9.
Indistinct, inarticulate, confused.
10.
Dull, not quick.
11.
Dim, indistinct, weak.
12.
(Colloq.) Intimate, familiar, neighborly, well-acquainted, friendly, hand and glove.
II. n.
Thickest part.
III. ad.
1.
Frequently, fast, quick.
2.
Densely, closely, thickly.
3.
To a great depth.

Wikipedia

Thick

Thick may refer to:

  • A bulky or heavyset body shape or overweight
  • Thick (album), 1999 fusion jazz album by Tribal Tech
  • Thick concept, in philosophy, a concept that is both descriptive and evaluative
  • Thick description, in anthropology, a description that explains a behaviour along with its broader context
  • Thick Records, a Chicago-based record label
  • Thick set, in mathematics, set of integers containing arbitrarily long intervals
  • Thick fluid, a viscous fluid
Examples of use of thick
1. Instead of being miles thick, why can‘t the atmosphere be just a few metres thick?
2. It had very thick shoulders, a long, thick tail with a blunt end and small round ears.
3. Even though the device probably exploded, the bowhead was protected by a one foot thick layer of blubber and thick bones it uses to break through ice one foot thick to breathe at the surface.
4. Walking round the compound of the barracks clad in thick verdure, he learned about how the unit has created a thick woodland and greenery.
5. All the symbols on the four–inch–long (10–centimeter–long), two–and–a–half–inch–thick (six–and–a–half–centimeter–thick) stone are open to interpretation.