thicklythick‧ly /ˈθɪkli/ adverb 
 
- A slattern brought his own meal, a thickly spiced bowl of soup.
 - He was a stout man with a bald crown round which a ruff of brown hair grew thickly.
 - He was in a blue uniform coat that was thickly encrusted with gold loops and edged with black astrakhan fur.
 - It has a thickly soft, two-beat thud, like the sound of a heavy door being repeatedly opened and shut.
 - Peel off the skins and thickly slice the potatoes.
 - The snow was driving down so thickly that the windscreen-wiper couldn't keep the glass free of it.
 
   ► thickly populated/wooded etc- Its thickly wooded shores, pastoral rivers and mercurial weather draw naturalists and artists.
 - Most of northern Calabria is mountainous and thickly wooded with pine, silver fir and maple.
 - Of all the nearby hills, its pinnacle was closest to their mountain, and it was the most thickly wooded.
 - Take the footpath beside the Esk, here thickly wooded with birch and ash, for a hundred yards or so upstream.
 - The land over the hill was thickly wooded.
 - The spacious stone house had originally been one of three sharing the same hilly and thickly wooded parcel of land.
 - We drove on through the village and turned into a clearing surrounded by a thickly wooded area.
 - When the air became more thickly populated, such extravagant forms disappeared.
 
  nounthickthicknessthickenerthickeningthickoadjectivethickverbthickenadverbthickly