thickish


thick

T0163300 (thĭk)adj. thick·er, thick·est 1. a. Relatively great in extent from one surface to the opposite, usually in the smallest solid dimension; not thin: a thick board.b. Measuring a specified number of units in this dimension: two inches thick.2. Heavy in form, build, or stature; thickset: a thick neck.3. Having component parts in a close, crowded state or arrangement; dense: a thick forest.4. Having or suggesting a heavy or viscous consistency: thick tomato sauce.5. Having a great number; abounding: a room thick with flies.6. Impenetrable by the eyes: a thick fog.7. a. Hard to hear or understand, as from being husky or slurred: thick speech.b. Very noticeable; pronounced: has a thick accent.8. Informal Lacking mental agility; stupid.9. Informal Very friendly; intimate: thick friends.10. Informal Going beyond what is tolerable; excessive.adv.1. In a thick manner; deeply or heavily: Seashells lay thick on the beach.2. In a close, compact state or arrangement; densely: Dozens of braids hung thick from the back of her head.3. So as to be thick; thickly: Slice the bread thick for the best French toast.n.1. The thickest part.2. The most active or intense part: in the thick of the fighting.Idiom: thick and thin Good and bad times: They remained friends through thick and thin.
[Middle English thicke, from Old English thicce; see tegu- in Indo-European roots.]
thick′ish adj.thick′ly adv.
Translations
densospesso