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单词 thick
释义

Definition of thick in English:

thick

adjective θɪkθɪk
  • 1With opposite sides or surfaces that are far or relatively far apart.

    thick slices of bread
    thick metal cables
    the walls are 5 feet thick
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Beneath his arm, he carried a thick, leather-bound book; it's title scrawled on the cover in an embellished silver font.
    • A scar ran from above his right eye, across his nose and mouth, and ended just below the left side of his thick lips.
    • The district woke up to a thick blanket of snow this morning as the winter entered its most bitter phase.
    • Her light footsteps could be seen in the thick blanket of snow.
    • It was mid-December, cold, and a thick blanket of snow covered everything.
    • The burgers they dine on are suitably beefy without being too big, with stacks of thick fries on the side.
    • She laughed, then entered, the thick door closing behind her.
    • I came very close to picking the thick tome up the other day, but some stubborn impulse in me resisted.
    • I closed the thick oak door and peered in the little window.
    • There was a thick layer of dust on the top of the television.
    • To the south there are high mountains, covered in thick spring snow.
    • A thick blanket of snow thwarted the efforts of search and rescue teams hunting for the missing girl yesterday, prolonging the agony for her family.
    • I arrived about fifteen minutes early, and leaned against a thick tree, closing my eyes for a moment.
    • How fantastic it would be to wake up on Christmas morning, pull back the curtains and see the landscape covered by a thick layer of snow.
    • She looked across her room to the desk on the other side, the thick book on top of it waiting to be read.
    • No one had visited here for a long time and everything was covered by a thick layer of dust and the musty smell that accompanied a dwelling no one inhabited anymore.
    • The ice that covers the surface is probably too thick to allow sunlight through.
    • I looked down to see new footprints in the thick layer of dust.
    • The wood floor creaked as they explored the old furniture and boxes that had dust inches thick layering them.
    • The room was covered in a thick layer of dust, and it looked as though no one had been there in years, but whoever had been there last was surely not welcome.
    Synonyms
    in extent/diameter, across, wide, broad, deep
    stocky, sturdy, chunky, dumpy, hefty, thickset, beefy, meaty, broad, large, big, bulky, solid, substantial
    fat, stout, plump
    1. 1.1 (of a garment or other knitted or woven item) made of heavy material.
      a thick sweater
      Example sentencesExamples
      • People started coming to school with thick jackets and other winter clothing.
      • Eventually, he prised himself out of bed, pulled on fur-lined boots, a warm hat and a thick jacket, and wandered outside.
      • Rebecca toyed with the edge of the thick blanket closest to her face, knowing her sickness would not allow her any sleep.
      • So I decided the only solution was to carry my flat boots, hat and thick scarf with me.
      • And it was so cold that even wearing thick jumpers at night left you shivering.
      • I should probably turn off the heater, put on a thick sweater and go to bed.
      • Less than ten minutes later, they were curled up on the sofa together under a thick blanket, each clasping a mug of tea.
      • She got out the thick oven mitts that she carried for such occasions, and picked up the jar with the intention of claiming the reward for herself.
      • Keyes puts on thick socks to keep her feet warm and curls up informally.
      • Time to get the thermal long johns out of the dresser and bring my thick socks forward to the front of the drawer.
      • Mr Whitby said the man was quite large, wearing a baseball cap and a thick coat, which looked out of place in the warm weather.
      • She saw a man carrying a bundle wrapped in thick blankets.
      • Bundled up in a thick jacket, scarf and gloves, Nicholas went outside.
      • The evidence was overwhelming: why was he wearing a thick coat and hat on what was a glorious early September New York morning?
      • She watched as he buttoned up his thick coat and pulled gloves onto his hands.
      • And, as long as your socks are thick, they're actually quite warm.
      • I wasn't sure where she had gotten them from, but she was now dressed in a thick jacket and pants, with black mittens and boots.
      • He quickly dressed in a thick sweater and jacket before walking out of his room.
      • With the thick gloves on, I couldn't adjust the belt.
      • They get so excited, those girls, when they get a chance to dress up in their thick scarves.
      Synonyms
      chunky, bulky, heavy, cable-knit, heavyweight
      woollen, woolly
    2. 1.2 (of writing or printing) consisting of broad lines.
      a headline in thick black type
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is a display font whose forms are extremely thick, up to the extent of being nearly illegible.
      • Currently the space for their father on the document is struck through with a thick black line as though he was unknown or the children illegitimate.
      • Her pen drew a nice, thick, black line across a column of handwriting.
      • On closer inspection, however, the reader would have spotted that the seven columns of adverts were separated by thick black lines.
      • Feel free to use any font you like, but try to pick one with thick letters.
      • His pencil went flying and left a thick, black line across the work he'd been doing.
      • It'll generally be a pretty thick print.
      • I've got a problem with I's and L's showing up too thick in my PDFs.
  • 2Made up of a large number of things or people close together.

    his hair was long and thick
    the road winds through thick forest
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She was fair-skinned, her eyes closed under thick eyelashes.
    • So far the scenery around her had been thick fur trees and dense foliage.
    • By dawn, when we can see a little, we realise that we are in the midst of thick forests.
    • Far away behind the hill, at the edge of a thick forest, the brown water of a stream flowed rapidly.
    • He was tall and lanky, with small round glasses and a close cap of thick curls.
    • His thick eyebrows draw closer to his nose as he smiles with his yellow teeth.
    • We sped along a busy dual carriageway, lined with thick bushes and rocky outcrops.
    • Gauls and Germans used the thick forests of northern Europe to hide from Caesar's legions and to ambush them when opportunities arose.
    • The rich thick forest cover around the Etna region is an added attraction to the tourists.
    • The slopes are covered with thick forests while the basins hold orchards, fields and picturesque hamlets.
    • Tall palm trees and thick forests of cactuses give travellers the impression that they are staying in a tropical region.
    • He had a goatee and thick eyebrows that hung over dark eyes.
    • The road twisted and turned up and around the mountains, and soon I was surrounded by thick forest.
    • I turned off the paved road into a dirt track, snaking through the thick forest alongside a bubbly creek.
    • His features were fine and the hair that was tied loosely behind his head was thick and a rich dark brown.
    • Nelson frowned, his thick eyebrows pulling together into a solid line.
    • At the end of the three-hour journey, the thick forests thin out revealing a much-used pathway which slopes abruptly to the bed of a nearby river.
    • They are large, burrowing, nocturnal animals, with strong claws and a thick coat.
    • It is an area dense with the thick woods and craggy terrain of a largely virgin Arctic rain forest.
    • To Jude she looked like an angel, with her dark locks encircling her face and her eyes closed and edged in thick lashes.
    • Then we plunged into thick forest for the final descent to the village.
    • Even though I have pretty simple hair - thick and straight - I'm nervous about how it's going to look.
    Synonyms
    plentiful, abundant, profuse, luxuriant, bushy, rich, riotous, exuberant
    rank, rampant
    dense, close-packed, concentrated, crowded, condensed, compact, impenetrable, impassable
    serried
    informal jungly
    1. 2.1thick with Densely filled or covered with.
      the ground was thick with yellow leaves
      figurative the air was thick with tension
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It reminded me of the days when I attended marketing meetings where the air was thick with such terms.
      • However, the air was sometimes so thick with dust that it was almost impossible to breathe.
      • It was light, and birds were singing, but the sky was thick with early-morning clouds.
      • The air around them was thick with dust and age as they descended a narrow set of spiral stone stairs.
      • There was a long silence that hung in the air and made it thick with dread and worry.
      • Throughout the weeks of Advent the news has been thick with rumours of war.
      • The air is often thick with the perfume of jasmine and orange blossom.
      • It was the morning of the house tournament and the air was already thick with anticipation.
      • The autumn air is thick with assertions that the Prime Minister's luck is finally running out.
      • The trees stretched overhead while the ground beneath them was thick with shrubs and grasses.
      • The gardens were in full bloom, and the air was thick with the sweet scent of flowers.
      • The stables were quiet and musty, and the air was thick with the warm smell of horses.
      • The alley was so thick with smoke that Carter could hardly see the men making it.
      • The air was thick with grit and smoke, its acidic taste coating the insides of her mouth.
      • I ran out of the bedroom and saw the hallway absolutely thick with black smoke.
      • The red rug that covered almost the entire width of the hall was thick with dust.
      • Anyway he says the whole region is thick with tens of thousands of troops dug in for the long haul.
      • It is one of very few neighbourhoods where the air is thick with the stench of rotting bin bags.
      • The air was thick with incense smoke from joss sticks and everyone was eating.
      • The air is often thick with fine particulates that coat filters and adhere to fluid spills.
      • They lived on the boat for days or weeks at a time, passing by quiet, unnamed islands thick with trees.
      Synonyms
      crowded, filled, packed, teeming, seething, swarming, crawling, crammed, thronged, bursting at the seams, solid, overflowing, choked, jammed, congested
      covered
      full of, cram-full of, overrun by, abounding in
      informal jam-packed, chock-a-block, stuffed, chock-full of
      Australian/New Zealand informal chocker
      rare pullulating
      (thick with people) British informallike Piccadilly Circus
    2. 2.2 (of the air or atmosphere, or a substance in the air) opaque, dense, or heavy.
      a motorway pile-up in thick fog
      a thick cloud of smoke
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The lowering clouds develop into thick fog, then break into dazzling sunlight.
      • In these situations, the smell of stale sweat and charcoal smoke permeates the thick air.
      • Then, they saw a thick cloud of smoke whirl heavenwards.
      • When I walk through it, the thick odor of leather assaults my senses.
      • Because Titan has a thick atmosphere, able to carry sound waves, the moon is a noisy place.
      • As she gazed out into the expanse she saw nothing of the thick silver fog, or the dark grey water.
      • Sometimes the odor was too pungent and thick for her to stand it for very long.
      • The air was thick and murky, and she began to imagine horrible things coming for her.
      • It simply continued, going on towards infinity until finally the air itself was so thick as to be opaque.
      • The next day I'm mulling over the view from my window, watching the fat, grey clouds blossom in the thick air, hoping for a storm to clear the mood.
      • Venus, with a thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide, has a surface temperature of 900 degrees Fahrenheit.
      • At one point a section of the harbour was cordoned off amid fears of exploding diesel as thick clouds of smoke and fumes billowed across Cartron Bay.
      • The city is blanketed today by large, thick clouds of smoke, the sun not able to pierce through at all today.
      • The air was thick and heavy with humidity, serving to dampen their spirits even further.
      • They could no longer see the town but they could see thick clouds of smoke wafting up in the distance.
      • The latter has a thick atmosphere containing methane, and, it is thought, oceans and lakes containing hydrocarbons.
      • The bottom floor of this mansion was not an inviting place; it was dark and damp; the floors were slightly wet from dripping pipes and the air was thick and heavy.
      • And then of course we've got Titan, which is a great mystery with this very thick atmosphere.
      • He couldn't see a thing, as the moon hid behind the clouds and thick fog.
      • The air about them was thick enough to taste and tasting was unavoidable.
      • The air was thick and heavy, it was going to rain soon.
      • Smoke also blew in the direction of Downpatrick, where a thick cloud of smoke also covered the town's Market Street.
      • Television footage showed lava flowing out of the crater while thick clouds of smoke rose upwards and a large fireball burst into the night sky.
      • As well as that nice thick atmosphere, Titan is perpetually covered in clouds.
      • They could see an immense mountain that stretched up into heavy thick clouds.
      • The room is bathed in a yellow light, made dim by the thick haze of smoke hanging from the ceiling.
      • It was raining here for much of the day, and when there wasn't rain, there were thick clouds in the air.
      • The air is thick and heavy, filled with the smell of cigarette smoke and cheep beer.
      • Claustrophobia and dread permeate the air like the thick mist around the mansion.
      • As the sun slowly rose into the sky, its blinding rays of light were filtered through the thick mists and clouds.
      • The sound of the ax carried through the thick summer air, and I went to the window, shielding my eyes from the red glare of the sunset.
      • They may consist of spheres of gas like Jupiter or look like Neptune itself with a core of rock and ice surrounded by a thick atmosphere of hydrogen and helium.
      • Rain, heavy cloud cover and thick fog in the area had prompted Albania's prime minister to cancel his own flight to the conference.
      • The dust storms are so thick that you just can't even see your hand in front of your face.
      • The blue-gray smoke of cigars thickened the already thick air.
      • The forest was filled with dense fog, so thick that I couldn't see more than a few feet in front of me.
      • It was really weird to walk into this room; it was the only place seemingly in the house that didn't have a thick odor of mildew permeating the air.
      Synonyms
      dense, heavy, opaque, impenetrable, soupy, murky, smoggy
    3. 2.3 (of a person's head) having a dull pain or heavy feeling, especially as a result of a hangover or illness.
      influenza can cause a thick head
      Stephen woke late, his head thick and his mouth sour
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For the last two weeks I have had what seems like the flu: aching bones, a thick head, hot and cold shivers and I've gone off my food.
      • It was late as I was driving home from the bar, my head thick with beer and a variety of mixed drinks.
      • The morning after (now), I have a thick head and my mouth has the usual furry coating.
  • 3(of a liquid or a semi-liquid substance) relatively firm in consistency; not flowing freely.

    thick mud
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As he pulled his black sweater off, I could see a steady flow of thick red liquid seeping freely from his left shoulder.
    • If the soup is too thick, add a little water until the desired consistency is achieved.
    • She spooned some of the thick liquid into a spoon and handed it to him.
    • In some cases, they have been burnt by leaking mustard gas, which, despite its name, is a thick, viscous liquid.
    • Once it has the consistency of thick cream, pour into warm sterilised jars.
    • Beat the eggs, sugar and vanilla extract together in a bowl until the mixture is thick and creamy and coats the back of a spoon.
    • Glycerin is a thick liquid with a sweet taste that is found in fats and oils and is the primary triglyceride found in coconut and olive oil.
    • The soups were equally good; the potato soup was thick and creamy and was served in a deep bowl with a generous helping of croutons.
    • It is more appetising than it sounds, having the creamy white consistency of thick mayonnaise.
    • Cook for a few minutes longer until the lamb and zucchini are both tender and the mixture has the consistency of a thick sauce.
    • It was just the right consistency, neither too thick nor too watery, and the eggplant itself was thinly sliced and tender.
    • Everything seems so far away, and if feels as though I'm dragging myself through thick liquid.
    • Using a small balloon whisk, mix in enough oil to give a thick emulsion.
    • Mix all the ingredients to form a thick batter of pouring consistency.
    • Add salt, pepper and cream and reduce to a thick, creamy consistency.
    • The dough should have the consistency of thick mayonnaise.
    • My main meal came with well seasoned roasted potatoes, nice firm courgettes in thick tomato sauce, and mildly spiced yam.
    • It should have the consistency of a thick paste.
    • This is a thick substance that is applied in two coats and will create a water barrier on your wall.
    • Return the strained liquid to the saucepan and reduce to a thick syrup.
    • Mix the clay with a little water until it is the consistency of very thick oatmeal.
    Synonyms
    semi-solid, firm, stiff, stiffened, heavy
    clotted, coagulated, viscid, viscous, gelatinous, mucilaginous, ropy
    concentrated
    rare inspissated, viscoid
  • 4informal Of low intelligence; stupid.

    he's a bit thick
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The look of murderous, seething fury on my face must have finally sunk into his thick bovine head, because he turned and left.
    • Everybody thinks he's a bit thick, but it shows he has got some brains.
    • She is nothing but a stupid, old woman with an extremely thick skull, through which nothing can penetrate.
    • Up until then I'd just been branded as the thick, stupid farmer's son.
    • All I could think was that the author must think I'm too slow and thick to work it out for myself.
    • I might be being a bit thick here but I don't get what ‘women like me’ means.
    • At least, it might look that way if you were a bit thick.
    • He paused, waiting for the cruel and actually childishly stupid words to sink into my thick brain.
    • He wasn't complaining either; Ashley and Harmony seemed to get along fine, though Mark could tell Harmony thought Ashley was a bit thick.
    • I blinked my eyes blearily and opened my mouth to yawn; I felt thick and slow.
    • Now, excuse me if I'm being a bit thick here but haven't both of these ideas been around for donkeys' years?
    • I particularly like kids' fiction (mainly because I'm a bit thick and it's easy to read).
    • At times he was stupid, but he was never thick enough to mess with her.
    • Was he plain stupid, thick or did he just want to die?
    • She was gorgeous, and yet she was as thick and unintelligent as a sheep.
    • I used to think it was me being stupid and thick; the teachers used to call me that a lot.
    Synonyms
    stupid, unintelligent, ignorant, dense, brainless, mindless, foolish, dull-witted, dull, slow-witted, witless, doltish, slow, dunce-like, simple-minded, empty-headed, vacuous, vapid, half-witted, idiotic, moronic, imbecilic
  • 5(of a voice) not clear or distinct; hoarse or husky.

    Guy's voice was thick with desire
    a snarling thick voice
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Her thick, smoky voice only deepened as she stepped close to me.
    • I hoped he would pick up, and not his mother or a sibling, since my voice was thick from crying.
    • Josh could tell that Rob was in tears now - his voice was thick and he was breathing hard.
    • Debbie's voice was thick and nasal and Ashton felt a stab in the stomach, knowing that his wife had been crying.
    • Though her voice was thick from tears by the end, she held the tears back.
    • His voice was thick, unsteady, as he struggled against the frantic gasps for air that came with bitter, cried tears.
    • Adam's voice was thick and his pain-filled eyes met Ben's.
    • My voice grew thick and I wasn't surprised to feel the tears fall.
    • Her voice is thick, gritty and powerful, with a big, broad range.
    • ‘This is as far as you can go,’ he said in his thick voice, and Dana sighed in defeat.
    • Her voice was thick, but alluring in some indescribable way.
    • ‘Pray for your mother,’ he said in a thick voice, quite unlike the one he had just used.
    • Her voice was getting slightly thick, tears beginning to build in her eyes.
    • ‘This isn't really a good time,’ she hiccuped in a thick voice, roughly smearing the tears from her cheek with the palm of her hand.
    • ‘The doctors have given my mother a few days,’ Casey said in a thick, low voice.
    • He extended his hand and she listened to his voice, thick and rich as honey.
    • Adrian's voice was thick, as though he wanted to cry and Nicky wasn't sure what to do.
    • At lunchtime she rang him up, and he answered the phone with a thick voice, as though suffering from a hangover.
    Synonyms
    husky, hoarse, throaty, guttural, gravelly, rough, raspy, rasping, croaky, croaking
    indistinct, muffled
    1. 5.1 (of an accent) very marked and difficult to understand.
      a thick French accent
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The priest's accent is thick, and he falters in his memorized patter about the church's attempts to overcome poverty and prejudice.
      • It had also taken Katrina a while to grow accustomed to Hazel's thick accent, but after a few weeks of it, Katrina had come to like her voice.
      • Finally, I hear a thick Middle Eastern accent asking me what I'd like.
      • He speaks with a thick south German accent that is difficult to understand, even if you speak German.
      • He could always tell a new immigrant, and he could prove it by their weak English and thick accents.
      • He had a thick Liverpudlian accent which made it harder to understand and he was going into some detail about what had happened.
      • It was not hard to recognize Delilah's voice, nor Angel's thick accent as they talked, though it was harder to understand what they said.
      • ‘Yeah, you left your bag in my cab,’ he says in a thick Brooklyn accent.
      • The accent was thick, exotic and lilting, and sounded as if it came from the south.
      • He had a thick Italian accent but I could understand it for the most part.
      • His accent was thick, and she had no idea where it came from.
      • A tall, heavy-set man with a thick accent then reached his hand out toward us.
      • The actors are especially unhappy about the scene where the asylum seeker meets the English girl's parents and they cannot understand a word he says because of his thick accent.
      • He realized that the girl had a thick accent, but could not place it.
      • His co-workers didn't have a problem with that, or his thick accent, he said.
      • The guy had spoken with a thick accent which made it hard to understand his words.
      • ‘I would say we're pop rock,’ she says in a thick accent that gives away her Paisley background.
      • Plus, my accent was so thick that it was hard for the teachers to understand me.
      • Thoughtful and articulate with a warming, thick Scouse accent Nick has some pretty candid views about life and rock 'n' roll.
      • She speaks with a thick middle European accent, and she is difficult to understand.
      Synonyms
      obvious, pronounced, marked, broad, strong, rich, decided, distinct, conspicuous, noticeable, identifiable
  • 6informal predicative Having a very close, friendly relationship.

    he's very thick with the new master
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He seems very thick with him.
    • ‘He has a fair chance of success, too, for he seems very thick with Floyd, and it's a good thing to have a friend at headquarters,’ observed the Colonel.
    Synonyms
    friendly, intimate, familiar, on friendly terms, on good terms, on the best of terms, hand in glove
noun θɪkθɪk
the thick
  • The most active or crowded part of something.

    we were in the thick of the battle
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He was always at the front and always in the thick of battle.
    • He was winning the game easily but, in the thick of battle, made some blunder and lost.
    • In a few days, or even hours, they could be back in the thick of battle, their crews consumed once more by the thrill of the fear coursing through them as the bullets fly again.
    • Day after day, they led their men into battle, throwing themselves into the thick of the fighting, each time escaping death only by the skin of their teeth.
    • Kittigrew is in the thick of it as he determines to kill the pirate and end his reign of terror once and for all, but it's safe to say that he has no idea what he's getting himself into.
    • He instructed the soldiers to take the wounded back to safety while he waited in the thick of the gun battle, under constant enemy fire.
    • Nor could the Yorkshire Post tell its readers that soldiers and regiments from the county were in the thick of the battle.
    • In large part through British manipulation of local politics, the struggle in Kenya became a kind of civil war, with the Home Guard and African police thrown into the thick of it.
    • Last week's defeat against Pompey dragged the club back into the thick of a relegation battle.
    • No distance separates the audience from the actors, who mill on the dance floor in the thick of the crowd.
    • Roger and James also commanded squadrons of their own, and were in the thick of the fighting during the battle.
    • Mr Khan, who is the Minister of Works, will no doubt be in the thick of things, and will supervise such enterprises as the widening of roads and the repair of landslides.
    • In 1988, at the age of 24, he was in the thick of the same battles within the Edinburgh Labour Party.
    • Eventually Guy and Mia end up in the thick of battle in Spain.
    • That and their tendency to concede late goals has put Wanderers right back in the thick of the relegation battle, just when things were looking up.
    • When I last spoke to him on March 23, he said he was in the thick of the action.
    • The court was shown a video in which the youth, who cannot be named because of his age, was seen throwing stones at police from the thick of a crowd in White Abbey Road at the height of the disturbances.
    • It never feels overwhelming and even in the thick of battle it's not distracting.
    • The turning point was when James himself, in the thick of the battle, was cut down.
    • Defeat leaves the club in the thick of the relegation battle.
    Synonyms
    midst, centre, hub, middle, core, heart
    focus
adverb θɪkθɪk
  • In or with deep, dense, or heavy mass.

    bread spread thick with butter
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Of course, if you are a native to Kentucky, it is best when spread thick between two slices of white bread for a quick lunch.
    • The fog lay thick and cold over the countryside that morning, and inside the barracks it was pitch-black and silent, except for the deep, steady breathing of the gunners.
    • When they both exhaled, the smoke hung thick in the air.
    • Trees grew thick along the farthest side, shading off the entire area.
    • It can be spread thick or thin with a tool or craft stick.
    • The snow lay thick upon the graves, and the day was cold and dreary.

Phrases

  • a bit thick

    • informal Unfair or unreasonable.

      I thought this was a bit thick and tried to defend myself
      Example sentencesExamples
      • While I have every sympathy with the injured man, it is a bit thick that the Minister for Justice should suggest in this House that every street demonstration is carried out by ‘irresponsible and criminal elements,’ his own words.
      • I admit that I did think it was a bit thick that he should end up completely out of luck — losing his job, arrested, charged, unemployed and perhaps even unemployable — while life just got better and better for his old adversary.
      • I have no idea what the total is for the country as a whole, but again, it's a bit thick to be biting the hand that feeds you.
      • He sometimes thought it was a bit thick that the soldiers gobbled up everyone's provisions and his mamma was so poor she had to disguise herself as an old, old lady and sell lilacs at the railway station.
      • It's a bit thick; it is really!
      Synonyms
      unreasonable, unfair, unjust, unjustified, uncalled for, unwarranted, unnecessary, excessive
  • give someone (or get) a thick ear

    • informal Punish someone (or be punished) with a blow on the ear or head.

      if I thought you were serious, I would give you a thick ear!
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I got over the wall and ran into a small crowd of fans to hide, terrified that the bobby might have seen me and would come and give me a thick ear as he turfed me out.
      • But if I tried to treat my wife, Margot, the way Caligula treated his, she'd give me a thick ear pretty quick.
      • They are a culinary retreat that harks back to childhood and a time when the world was a safer place and the Home Secretary wasn't waiting to give you a thick ear for not carrying your national identity card.
      • If your dad didn't have a team of lawyers I'd give you a thick ear.
      • The teenager sitting in front of us on the way out was so rude, I was ready to give him a thick ear myself.
      • I hope Paula doesn't give me a thick ear next year when I do the coast-to-coast walk again after my past comments.
      • Pull the other one John: you're still the same man you were the time you gave me a thick ear for shoplifting.
  • thick and fast

    • Rapidly and in great numbers.

      replies are coming in thick and fast
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Pulling out all stops, the actors beat the rain, remained focused, and the dialogue flew thick and fast.
      • With billions more having been raised this year by UK buyout funds alone, the deals are likely to keep coming thick and fast.
      • The allusions flew thick and fast, with novels and novelists summed up with devastating precision and insight.
      • Inevitably at the end of a long season, injuries come thick and fast.
      • Although criticisms of the multi-million pound scheme came thick and fast, the experts were on hand to answer questions.
      • That's when the tears flow thick and fast, and the howling and screaming increase by several decibels.
      • The unauthorised biographies flowed thick and fast, film-school recruitment rose and the academics had a field day.
      • Audiences are larger and younger, classical and contemporary works are pleasing critics and the awards have come thick and fast.
      • The polls close on May 5 at 10 pm and results will start coming in thick and fast in the early hours of the morning.
      • As he wages his campaign against them, the visual gags and wise-cracks come thick and fast.
  • (as) thick as a brick

    • Very stupid.

      her employers must see that she is perceived as being as thick as a brick
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He may well be as thick as two short planks and show a reckless disregard for the facts, but he's also a grubby opportunist who thrives on the misery of others.
      • Unfortunately, I had observed the boatman was as thick as a plank.
      • Then again, maybe I'm just as thick as two short planks, which a lot of people think.
      • She once described herself as ‘thick as two planks’.
      • It's like meeting a really handsome bloke and finding out he's thick as two short planks when he opens his mouth.
      • Maybe he's as thick as two planks and thinks she is a member of the Labor party.
      • We knew that she was really as thick as two planks.
      • Generally, I like ads that don't assume I'm as thick as two short planks and present themselves in a clever and/or funny way.
      • This is very surprising because the man has a reputation as being thick as two planks.
      • A person can be very good at reeling off facts and figures but can still be as thick as two short planks.
      Synonyms
      stupid, unintelligent, ignorant, dense, brainless, mindless, foolish, dull-witted, dull, slow-witted, witless, doltish, slow, dunce-like, simple-minded, empty-headed, vacuous, vapid, half-witted, idiotic, moronic, imbecilic
  • (as) thick as thieves

    • informal (of two or more people) very close or friendly.

      he and Auntie Lou were thick as thieves
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I can't remember how our friendship really got going, but before we knew it we were thick as thieves.
      • No wonder she and Claire were the best of friends and thick as thieves.
      • ‘By the end, we were all thick as thieves,’ insists McCann.
      • I was in love with her, and for two years the two of us were thick as thieves.
      • Besides, I thought you two were as thick as thieves.
      • We were as thick as thieves and would share any secret with one another.
      • ‘He was seven years older than I, but even then, we were inseparable, thick as thieves,’ she said with a soft laugh.
      • In the olden days, Bryan and Justin had been as thick as thieves, closer than brothers, best friends for life.
      • They lost interest in each other during the teenage years - by then it was all about rivalry - but now, as mothers themselves, they're as thick as thieves again.
      • The younger girl is drawn to Anita's rebellious streak and they soon become thick as thieves.
      Synonyms
      friendly, intimate, familiar, on friendly terms, on good terms, on the best of terms, hand in glove
  • (as) thick as two (short) planks

    • informal Very stupid.

      that school is where you are sent if you are thick as two planks but sporty
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's like meeting a really handsome bloke and finding out he's thick as two short planks when he opens his mouth.
      • A person can be very good at reeling off facts and figures but can still be as thick as two short planks.
      • This is very surprising because the man has a reputation as being thick as two planks.
      • He may well be as thick as two short planks and show a reckless disregard for the facts, but he's also a grubby opportunist who thrives on the misery of others.
      • Generally, I like ads that don't assume I'm as thick as two short planks and present themselves in a clever and/or funny way.
      • She once described herself as ‘thick as two planks’.
      • Then again, maybe I'm just as thick as two short planks, which a lot of people think.
      • Maybe he's as thick as two planks and thinks she is a member of the Labor party.
      • Unfortunately, I had observed the boatman was as thick as a plank.
      • We knew that she was really as thick as two planks.
      Synonyms
      stupid, unintelligent, ignorant, dense, brainless, mindless, foolish, dull-witted, dull, slow-witted, witless, doltish, slow, dunce-like, simple-minded, empty-headed, vacuous, vapid, half-witted, idiotic, moronic, imbecilic
  • the thick end of

    • informal The greater part of (something)

      he was borrowing the thick end of £750 every week
      Example sentencesExamples
      • That is the thick end of a quarter of a billion dollars.
      • The timing too was crass, since the increase coincided with MPs awarding themselves an annual pay rise equal to the thick end of a year's entire minimum wage.
      • Unfortunately in situations like this the need to blame someone comes in and Alec is getting the thick end of it.
  • through thick and thin

    • Under all circumstances, no matter how difficult.

      they stuck together through thick and thin
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She gets her inspiration from her five great friends (though she has more than that), who have stuck with her through thick and thin.
      • As Sarah faces a possible future without the love of her life, she must push her fears aside and stand by James through thick and thin.
      • I've supported the club through thick and thin but this is all about making money.
      • Dogs will stand by your side through thick and thin.
      • I've stuck with the franchise through thick and thin.
      • We were always there for each other through thick and thin; no matter what happened.
      • He has done incredible service to the conservative cause through thick and thin, good times and bad, for well over a decade.
      • The great-grandfather has been following the town's rugby league club, through thick and thin, for almost 80 years.
      • They stuck with their story through thick and thin at a time when the U.S. Army was denying that their units were even in that area.
      • My friends have stuck by me through thick and thin, and I think, you know, it's what good friendship's about.

Derivatives

  • thickish

  • adjective
    • Cut in thickish slices with a serrated knife (delicately pushing aside any pit that the blade encounters) and serve warm, at room temperature or cold.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • With the machine still running, add enough oil to make a thickish paste (about five to six tablespoons).
      • So he pushed a thickish book towards me, asking me to check if my name was in there.
      • Blend until smooth, then add three tablespoons of oil and about the same of warm water - enough to make a thickish purée. Season to taste and then spoon into a shallow dish.
      • ‘I will,’ he said and wrapped an arm around her thickish waist.

Origin

Old English thicce, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dik and German dick.

  • The ‘slow-witted’ sense of this Germanic word dates from the late 16th century. In Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 2 Falstaff says disparagingly of his companion Poins: ‘His wit's as thick as Tewkesbury mustard’. A very stupid person might be as thick as two short planks, thick as a plank or thick as a brick – there is a play on thick in the usual sense ‘deep from side to side’ and the sense ‘stupid’. Thick with the meaning ‘very friendly’, as in thick as thieves, comes from the sense ‘very close together, tightly packed’. To go through thick and thin goes back to medieval times and originally probably referred to someone pushing their way both through a thicket (a related OE word), where trees grew closely, and ‘thin wood’, where the going would be easier. See also callous

Rhymes

artic, brick, chick, click, crick, flick, hand-pick, hic, hick, kick, lick, mick, miskick, nick, pic, pick, quick, rick, shtick, sic, sick, slick, snick, stick, tic, tick, trick, Vic, wick
 
 

Definition of thick in US English:

thick

adjectiveθɪkTHik
  • 1With opposite sides or surfaces that are a great or relatively great distance apart.

    thick slices of bread
    thick metal cables
    the walls are 5 feet thick
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The wood floor creaked as they explored the old furniture and boxes that had dust inches thick layering them.
    • No one had visited here for a long time and everything was covered by a thick layer of dust and the musty smell that accompanied a dwelling no one inhabited anymore.
    • I came very close to picking the thick tome up the other day, but some stubborn impulse in me resisted.
    • The ice that covers the surface is probably too thick to allow sunlight through.
    • The district woke up to a thick blanket of snow this morning as the winter entered its most bitter phase.
    • There was a thick layer of dust on the top of the television.
    • I closed the thick oak door and peered in the little window.
    • A scar ran from above his right eye, across his nose and mouth, and ended just below the left side of his thick lips.
    • Her light footsteps could be seen in the thick blanket of snow.
    • The room was covered in a thick layer of dust, and it looked as though no one had been there in years, but whoever had been there last was surely not welcome.
    • Beneath his arm, he carried a thick, leather-bound book; it's title scrawled on the cover in an embellished silver font.
    • To the south there are high mountains, covered in thick spring snow.
    • A thick blanket of snow thwarted the efforts of search and rescue teams hunting for the missing girl yesterday, prolonging the agony for her family.
    • I arrived about fifteen minutes early, and leaned against a thick tree, closing my eyes for a moment.
    • I looked down to see new footprints in the thick layer of dust.
    • She laughed, then entered, the thick door closing behind her.
    • The burgers they dine on are suitably beefy without being too big, with stacks of thick fries on the side.
    • She looked across her room to the desk on the other side, the thick book on top of it waiting to be read.
    • How fantastic it would be to wake up on Christmas morning, pull back the curtains and see the landscape covered by a thick layer of snow.
    • It was mid-December, cold, and a thick blanket of snow covered everything.
    Synonyms
    in diameter, in extent, across, wide, broad, deep
    stocky, sturdy, chunky, dumpy, hefty, thickset, beefy, meaty, broad, large, big, bulky, solid, substantial
    1. 1.1 (of a garment or other knitted or woven item) made of heavy material for warmth or comfort.
      a thick sweater
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The evidence was overwhelming: why was he wearing a thick coat and hat on what was a glorious early September New York morning?
      • Less than ten minutes later, they were curled up on the sofa together under a thick blanket, each clasping a mug of tea.
      • Mr Whitby said the man was quite large, wearing a baseball cap and a thick coat, which looked out of place in the warm weather.
      • She watched as he buttoned up his thick coat and pulled gloves onto his hands.
      • She saw a man carrying a bundle wrapped in thick blankets.
      • And, as long as your socks are thick, they're actually quite warm.
      • Time to get the thermal long johns out of the dresser and bring my thick socks forward to the front of the drawer.
      • So I decided the only solution was to carry my flat boots, hat and thick scarf with me.
      • People started coming to school with thick jackets and other winter clothing.
      • He quickly dressed in a thick sweater and jacket before walking out of his room.
      • I wasn't sure where she had gotten them from, but she was now dressed in a thick jacket and pants, with black mittens and boots.
      • She got out the thick oven mitts that she carried for such occasions, and picked up the jar with the intention of claiming the reward for herself.
      • They get so excited, those girls, when they get a chance to dress up in their thick scarves.
      • And it was so cold that even wearing thick jumpers at night left you shivering.
      • With the thick gloves on, I couldn't adjust the belt.
      • Bundled up in a thick jacket, scarf and gloves, Nicholas went outside.
      • Keyes puts on thick socks to keep her feet warm and curls up informally.
      • Rebecca toyed with the edge of the thick blanket closest to her face, knowing her sickness would not allow her any sleep.
      • Eventually, he prised himself out of bed, pulled on fur-lined boots, a warm hat and a thick jacket, and wandered outside.
      • I should probably turn off the heater, put on a thick sweater and go to bed.
      Synonyms
      chunky, bulky, heavy, cable-knit, heavyweight
    2. 1.2 (of script or type) consisting of broad lines.
      a headline in thick black type
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Feel free to use any font you like, but try to pick one with thick letters.
      • Currently the space for their father on the document is struck through with a thick black line as though he was unknown or the children illegitimate.
      • His pencil went flying and left a thick, black line across the work he'd been doing.
      • Her pen drew a nice, thick, black line across a column of handwriting.
      • It'll generally be a pretty thick print.
      • I've got a problem with I's and L's showing up too thick in my PDFs.
      • It is a display font whose forms are extremely thick, up to the extent of being nearly illegible.
      • On closer inspection, however, the reader would have spotted that the seven columns of adverts were separated by thick black lines.
  • 2Made up of a large number of things or people close together.

    his hair was long and thick
    the road winds through thick forest
    Example sentencesExamples
    • To Jude she looked like an angel, with her dark locks encircling her face and her eyes closed and edged in thick lashes.
    • At the end of the three-hour journey, the thick forests thin out revealing a much-used pathway which slopes abruptly to the bed of a nearby river.
    • Far away behind the hill, at the edge of a thick forest, the brown water of a stream flowed rapidly.
    • Nelson frowned, his thick eyebrows pulling together into a solid line.
    • I turned off the paved road into a dirt track, snaking through the thick forest alongside a bubbly creek.
    • His features were fine and the hair that was tied loosely behind his head was thick and a rich dark brown.
    • Then we plunged into thick forest for the final descent to the village.
    • By dawn, when we can see a little, we realise that we are in the midst of thick forests.
    • It is an area dense with the thick woods and craggy terrain of a largely virgin Arctic rain forest.
    • His thick eyebrows draw closer to his nose as he smiles with his yellow teeth.
    • He had a goatee and thick eyebrows that hung over dark eyes.
    • The rich thick forest cover around the Etna region is an added attraction to the tourists.
    • So far the scenery around her had been thick fur trees and dense foliage.
    • They are large, burrowing, nocturnal animals, with strong claws and a thick coat.
    • We sped along a busy dual carriageway, lined with thick bushes and rocky outcrops.
    • He was tall and lanky, with small round glasses and a close cap of thick curls.
    • Gauls and Germans used the thick forests of northern Europe to hide from Caesar's legions and to ambush them when opportunities arose.
    • The slopes are covered with thick forests while the basins hold orchards, fields and picturesque hamlets.
    • Tall palm trees and thick forests of cactuses give travellers the impression that they are staying in a tropical region.
    • The road twisted and turned up and around the mountains, and soon I was surrounded by thick forest.
    • Even though I have pretty simple hair - thick and straight - I'm nervous about how it's going to look.
    • She was fair-skinned, her eyes closed under thick eyelashes.
    Synonyms
    plentiful, abundant, profuse, luxuriant, bushy, rich, riotous, exuberant
    1. 2.1thick withpredicative Densely filled or covered with.
      the room was thick with smoke
      figurative the air was thick with tension
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The stables were quiet and musty, and the air was thick with the warm smell of horses.
      • The trees stretched overhead while the ground beneath them was thick with shrubs and grasses.
      • The air was thick with incense smoke from joss sticks and everyone was eating.
      • Anyway he says the whole region is thick with tens of thousands of troops dug in for the long haul.
      • Throughout the weeks of Advent the news has been thick with rumours of war.
      • The air was thick with grit and smoke, its acidic taste coating the insides of her mouth.
      • The air is often thick with fine particulates that coat filters and adhere to fluid spills.
      • It reminded me of the days when I attended marketing meetings where the air was thick with such terms.
      • It was light, and birds were singing, but the sky was thick with early-morning clouds.
      • The autumn air is thick with assertions that the Prime Minister's luck is finally running out.
      • It was the morning of the house tournament and the air was already thick with anticipation.
      • It is one of very few neighbourhoods where the air is thick with the stench of rotting bin bags.
      • They lived on the boat for days or weeks at a time, passing by quiet, unnamed islands thick with trees.
      • The air is often thick with the perfume of jasmine and orange blossom.
      • The alley was so thick with smoke that Carter could hardly see the men making it.
      • I ran out of the bedroom and saw the hallway absolutely thick with black smoke.
      • However, the air was sometimes so thick with dust that it was almost impossible to breathe.
      • The air around them was thick with dust and age as they descended a narrow set of spiral stone stairs.
      • There was a long silence that hung in the air and made it thick with dread and worry.
      • The gardens were in full bloom, and the air was thick with the sweet scent of flowers.
      • The red rug that covered almost the entire width of the hall was thick with dust.
      Synonyms
      crowded, filled, packed, teeming, seething, swarming, crawling, crammed, thronged, bursting at the seams, solid, overflowing, choked, jammed, congested
    2. 2.2 (of the air or atmosphere, or a substance in the air) opaque, dense, or heavy.
      a thick cloud of smoke
      the shore was obscured by thick fog
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The sound of the ax carried through the thick summer air, and I went to the window, shielding my eyes from the red glare of the sunset.
      • The forest was filled with dense fog, so thick that I couldn't see more than a few feet in front of me.
      • They may consist of spheres of gas like Jupiter or look like Neptune itself with a core of rock and ice surrounded by a thick atmosphere of hydrogen and helium.
      • They could no longer see the town but they could see thick clouds of smoke wafting up in the distance.
      • Venus, with a thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide, has a surface temperature of 900 degrees Fahrenheit.
      • Sometimes the odor was too pungent and thick for her to stand it for very long.
      • The air is thick and heavy, filled with the smell of cigarette smoke and cheep beer.
      • In these situations, the smell of stale sweat and charcoal smoke permeates the thick air.
      • The bottom floor of this mansion was not an inviting place; it was dark and damp; the floors were slightly wet from dripping pipes and the air was thick and heavy.
      • He couldn't see a thing, as the moon hid behind the clouds and thick fog.
      • Then, they saw a thick cloud of smoke whirl heavenwards.
      • Claustrophobia and dread permeate the air like the thick mist around the mansion.
      • As she gazed out into the expanse she saw nothing of the thick silver fog, or the dark grey water.
      • It simply continued, going on towards infinity until finally the air itself was so thick as to be opaque.
      • It was really weird to walk into this room; it was the only place seemingly in the house that didn't have a thick odor of mildew permeating the air.
      • The dust storms are so thick that you just can't even see your hand in front of your face.
      • At one point a section of the harbour was cordoned off amid fears of exploding diesel as thick clouds of smoke and fumes billowed across Cartron Bay.
      • As well as that nice thick atmosphere, Titan is perpetually covered in clouds.
      • They could see an immense mountain that stretched up into heavy thick clouds.
      • The air about them was thick enough to taste and tasting was unavoidable.
      • It was raining here for much of the day, and when there wasn't rain, there were thick clouds in the air.
      • As the sun slowly rose into the sky, its blinding rays of light were filtered through the thick mists and clouds.
      • The air was thick and murky, and she began to imagine horrible things coming for her.
      • The room is bathed in a yellow light, made dim by the thick haze of smoke hanging from the ceiling.
      • The air was thick and heavy with humidity, serving to dampen their spirits even further.
      • The blue-gray smoke of cigars thickened the already thick air.
      • The air was thick and heavy, it was going to rain soon.
      • The lowering clouds develop into thick fog, then break into dazzling sunlight.
      • Because Titan has a thick atmosphere, able to carry sound waves, the moon is a noisy place.
      • Rain, heavy cloud cover and thick fog in the area had prompted Albania's prime minister to cancel his own flight to the conference.
      • And then of course we've got Titan, which is a great mystery with this very thick atmosphere.
      • The next day I'm mulling over the view from my window, watching the fat, grey clouds blossom in the thick air, hoping for a storm to clear the mood.
      • The city is blanketed today by large, thick clouds of smoke, the sun not able to pierce through at all today.
      • The latter has a thick atmosphere containing methane, and, it is thought, oceans and lakes containing hydrocarbons.
      • When I walk through it, the thick odor of leather assaults my senses.
      • Smoke also blew in the direction of Downpatrick, where a thick cloud of smoke also covered the town's Market Street.
      • Television footage showed lava flowing out of the crater while thick clouds of smoke rose upwards and a large fireball burst into the night sky.
      Synonyms
      dense, heavy, opaque, impenetrable, soupy, murky, smoggy
  • 3(of a liquid or a semiliquid substance) relatively firm in consistency; not flowing freely.

    thick mud
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Using a small balloon whisk, mix in enough oil to give a thick emulsion.
    • The dough should have the consistency of thick mayonnaise.
    • Once it has the consistency of thick cream, pour into warm sterilised jars.
    • It is more appetising than it sounds, having the creamy white consistency of thick mayonnaise.
    • In some cases, they have been burnt by leaking mustard gas, which, despite its name, is a thick, viscous liquid.
    • If the soup is too thick, add a little water until the desired consistency is achieved.
    • Glycerin is a thick liquid with a sweet taste that is found in fats and oils and is the primary triglyceride found in coconut and olive oil.
    • As he pulled his black sweater off, I could see a steady flow of thick red liquid seeping freely from his left shoulder.
    • Mix all the ingredients to form a thick batter of pouring consistency.
    • Beat the eggs, sugar and vanilla extract together in a bowl until the mixture is thick and creamy and coats the back of a spoon.
    • Everything seems so far away, and if feels as though I'm dragging myself through thick liquid.
    • It was just the right consistency, neither too thick nor too watery, and the eggplant itself was thinly sliced and tender.
    • Cook for a few minutes longer until the lamb and zucchini are both tender and the mixture has the consistency of a thick sauce.
    • She spooned some of the thick liquid into a spoon and handed it to him.
    • Return the strained liquid to the saucepan and reduce to a thick syrup.
    • Add salt, pepper and cream and reduce to a thick, creamy consistency.
    • It should have the consistency of a thick paste.
    • The soups were equally good; the potato soup was thick and creamy and was served in a deep bowl with a generous helping of croutons.
    • This is a thick substance that is applied in two coats and will create a water barrier on your wall.
    • Mix the clay with a little water until it is the consistency of very thick oatmeal.
    • My main meal came with well seasoned roasted potatoes, nice firm courgettes in thick tomato sauce, and mildly spiced yam.
    Synonyms
    semi-solid, firm, stiff, stiffened, heavy
  • 4informal Of low intelligence; stupid.

    he's a bit thick
    I've got to shout to get it into your thick head
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He paused, waiting for the cruel and actually childishly stupid words to sink into my thick brain.
    • At least, it might look that way if you were a bit thick.
    • He wasn't complaining either; Ashley and Harmony seemed to get along fine, though Mark could tell Harmony thought Ashley was a bit thick.
    • I blinked my eyes blearily and opened my mouth to yawn; I felt thick and slow.
    • Now, excuse me if I'm being a bit thick here but haven't both of these ideas been around for donkeys' years?
    • All I could think was that the author must think I'm too slow and thick to work it out for myself.
    • She is nothing but a stupid, old woman with an extremely thick skull, through which nothing can penetrate.
    • I used to think it was me being stupid and thick; the teachers used to call me that a lot.
    • At times he was stupid, but he was never thick enough to mess with her.
    • I particularly like kids' fiction (mainly because I'm a bit thick and it's easy to read).
    • Everybody thinks he's a bit thick, but it shows he has got some brains.
    • I might be being a bit thick here but I don't get what ‘women like me’ means.
    • Up until then I'd just been branded as the thick, stupid farmer's son.
    • She was gorgeous, and yet she was as thick and unintelligent as a sheep.
    • The look of murderous, seething fury on my face must have finally sunk into his thick bovine head, because he turned and left.
    • Was he plain stupid, thick or did he just want to die?
    Synonyms
    stupid, unintelligent, ignorant, dense, brainless, mindless, foolish, dull-witted, dull, slow-witted, witless, doltish, slow, dunce-like, simple-minded, empty-headed, vacuous, vapid, half-witted, idiotic, moronic, imbecilic
  • 5(of a voice) not clear or distinct; hoarse or husky.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I hoped he would pick up, and not his mother or a sibling, since my voice was thick from crying.
    • At lunchtime she rang him up, and he answered the phone with a thick voice, as though suffering from a hangover.
    • Her voice was getting slightly thick, tears beginning to build in her eyes.
    • He extended his hand and she listened to his voice, thick and rich as honey.
    • ‘Pray for your mother,’ he said in a thick voice, quite unlike the one he had just used.
    • ‘The doctors have given my mother a few days,’ Casey said in a thick, low voice.
    • Though her voice was thick from tears by the end, she held the tears back.
    • Her voice was thick, but alluring in some indescribable way.
    • Adrian's voice was thick, as though he wanted to cry and Nicky wasn't sure what to do.
    • ‘This isn't really a good time,’ she hiccuped in a thick voice, roughly smearing the tears from her cheek with the palm of her hand.
    • ‘This is as far as you can go,’ he said in his thick voice, and Dana sighed in defeat.
    • His voice was thick, unsteady, as he struggled against the frantic gasps for air that came with bitter, cried tears.
    • Debbie's voice was thick and nasal and Ashton felt a stab in the stomach, knowing that his wife had been crying.
    • Adam's voice was thick and his pain-filled eyes met Ben's.
    • My voice grew thick and I wasn't surprised to feel the tears fall.
    • Her voice is thick, gritty and powerful, with a big, broad range.
    • Her thick, smoky voice only deepened as she stepped close to me.
    • Josh could tell that Rob was in tears now - his voice was thick and he was breathing hard.
    Synonyms
    husky, hoarse, throaty, guttural, gravelly, rough, raspy, rasping, croaky, croaking
    1. 5.1 (of an accent) very marked and difficult to understand.
      a thick French accent
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A tall, heavy-set man with a thick accent then reached his hand out toward us.
      • His accent was thick, and she had no idea where it came from.
      • Thoughtful and articulate with a warming, thick Scouse accent Nick has some pretty candid views about life and rock 'n' roll.
      • He speaks with a thick south German accent that is difficult to understand, even if you speak German.
      • Plus, my accent was so thick that it was hard for the teachers to understand me.
      • He had a thick Liverpudlian accent which made it harder to understand and he was going into some detail about what had happened.
      • His co-workers didn't have a problem with that, or his thick accent, he said.
      • The actors are especially unhappy about the scene where the asylum seeker meets the English girl's parents and they cannot understand a word he says because of his thick accent.
      • She speaks with a thick middle European accent, and she is difficult to understand.
      • Finally, I hear a thick Middle Eastern accent asking me what I'd like.
      • It was not hard to recognize Delilah's voice, nor Angel's thick accent as they talked, though it was harder to understand what they said.
      • ‘Yeah, you left your bag in my cab,’ he says in a thick Brooklyn accent.
      • The guy had spoken with a thick accent which made it hard to understand his words.
      • The priest's accent is thick, and he falters in his memorized patter about the church's attempts to overcome poverty and prejudice.
      • He had a thick Italian accent but I could understand it for the most part.
      • The accent was thick, exotic and lilting, and sounded as if it came from the south.
      • ‘I would say we're pop rock,’ she says in a thick accent that gives away her Paisley background.
      • He realized that the girl had a thick accent, but could not place it.
      • It had also taken Katrina a while to grow accustomed to Hazel's thick accent, but after a few weeks of it, Katrina had come to like her voice.
      • He could always tell a new immigrant, and he could prove it by their weak English and thick accents.
      Synonyms
      obvious, pronounced, marked, broad, strong, rich, decided, distinct, conspicuous, noticeable, identifiable
  • 6informal predicative Having a very close, friendly relationship.

    he's very thick with the new boss
    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘He has a fair chance of success, too, for he seems very thick with Floyd, and it's a good thing to have a friend at headquarters,’ observed the Colonel.
    • He seems very thick with him.
    Synonyms
    friendly, intimate, familiar, on friendly terms, on good terms, on the best of terms, hand in glove
nounθɪkTHik
the thick
  • The busiest or most crowded part of something; the middle of something.

    the thick of battle
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He was winning the game easily but, in the thick of battle, made some blunder and lost.
    • Kittigrew is in the thick of it as he determines to kill the pirate and end his reign of terror once and for all, but it's safe to say that he has no idea what he's getting himself into.
    • Day after day, they led their men into battle, throwing themselves into the thick of the fighting, each time escaping death only by the skin of their teeth.
    • When I last spoke to him on March 23, he said he was in the thick of the action.
    • Last week's defeat against Pompey dragged the club back into the thick of a relegation battle.
    • The turning point was when James himself, in the thick of the battle, was cut down.
    • In a few days, or even hours, they could be back in the thick of battle, their crews consumed once more by the thrill of the fear coursing through them as the bullets fly again.
    • The court was shown a video in which the youth, who cannot be named because of his age, was seen throwing stones at police from the thick of a crowd in White Abbey Road at the height of the disturbances.
    • Eventually Guy and Mia end up in the thick of battle in Spain.
    • It never feels overwhelming and even in the thick of battle it's not distracting.
    • Defeat leaves the club in the thick of the relegation battle.
    • He instructed the soldiers to take the wounded back to safety while he waited in the thick of the gun battle, under constant enemy fire.
    • Nor could the Yorkshire Post tell its readers that soldiers and regiments from the county were in the thick of the battle.
    • That and their tendency to concede late goals has put Wanderers right back in the thick of the relegation battle, just when things were looking up.
    • In large part through British manipulation of local politics, the struggle in Kenya became a kind of civil war, with the Home Guard and African police thrown into the thick of it.
    • He was always at the front and always in the thick of battle.
    • No distance separates the audience from the actors, who mill on the dance floor in the thick of the crowd.
    • Roger and James also commanded squadrons of their own, and were in the thick of the fighting during the battle.
    • Mr Khan, who is the Minister of Works, will no doubt be in the thick of things, and will supervise such enterprises as the widening of roads and the repair of landslides.
    • In 1988, at the age of 24, he was in the thick of the same battles within the Edinburgh Labour Party.
    Synonyms
    midst, centre, hub, middle, core, heart
adverbθɪkTHik
  • In or with deep, dense, or heavy mass.

    bread spread thick with butter
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Trees grew thick along the farthest side, shading off the entire area.
    • When they both exhaled, the smoke hung thick in the air.
    • Of course, if you are a native to Kentucky, it is best when spread thick between two slices of white bread for a quick lunch.
    • The snow lay thick upon the graves, and the day was cold and dreary.
    • The fog lay thick and cold over the countryside that morning, and inside the barracks it was pitch-black and silent, except for the deep, steady breathing of the gunners.
    • It can be spread thick or thin with a tool or craft stick.

Phrases

  • a bit thick

    • informal Unfair or unreasonable.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's a bit thick; it is really!
      • While I have every sympathy with the injured man, it is a bit thick that the Minister for Justice should suggest in this House that every street demonstration is carried out by ‘irresponsible and criminal elements,’ his own words.
      • I have no idea what the total is for the country as a whole, but again, it's a bit thick to be biting the hand that feeds you.
      • I admit that I did think it was a bit thick that he should end up completely out of luck — losing his job, arrested, charged, unemployed and perhaps even unemployable — while life just got better and better for his old adversary.
      • He sometimes thought it was a bit thick that the soldiers gobbled up everyone's provisions and his mamma was so poor she had to disguise herself as an old, old lady and sell lilacs at the railway station.
      Synonyms
      unreasonable, unfair, unjust, unjustified, uncalled for, unwarranted, unnecessary, excessive
  • thick and fast

    • Rapidly and in great numbers.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • With billions more having been raised this year by UK buyout funds alone, the deals are likely to keep coming thick and fast.
      • Pulling out all stops, the actors beat the rain, remained focused, and the dialogue flew thick and fast.
      • Audiences are larger and younger, classical and contemporary works are pleasing critics and the awards have come thick and fast.
      • That's when the tears flow thick and fast, and the howling and screaming increase by several decibels.
      • The unauthorised biographies flowed thick and fast, film-school recruitment rose and the academics had a field day.
      • The allusions flew thick and fast, with novels and novelists summed up with devastating precision and insight.
      • Although criticisms of the multi-million pound scheme came thick and fast, the experts were on hand to answer questions.
      • The polls close on May 5 at 10 pm and results will start coming in thick and fast in the early hours of the morning.
      • Inevitably at the end of a long season, injuries come thick and fast.
      • As he wages his campaign against them, the visual gags and wise-cracks come thick and fast.
  • (as) thick as a brick

    • Very stupid.

      her employers must see that she is perceived as being as thick as a brick
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Maybe he's as thick as two planks and thinks she is a member of the Labor party.
      • Unfortunately, I had observed the boatman was as thick as a plank.
      • This is very surprising because the man has a reputation as being thick as two planks.
      • She once described herself as ‘thick as two planks’.
      • Then again, maybe I'm just as thick as two short planks, which a lot of people think.
      • It's like meeting a really handsome bloke and finding out he's thick as two short planks when he opens his mouth.
      • We knew that she was really as thick as two planks.
      • He may well be as thick as two short planks and show a reckless disregard for the facts, but he's also a grubby opportunist who thrives on the misery of others.
      • Generally, I like ads that don't assume I'm as thick as two short planks and present themselves in a clever and/or funny way.
      • A person can be very good at reeling off facts and figures but can still be as thick as two short planks.
      Synonyms
      stupid, unintelligent, ignorant, dense, brainless, mindless, foolish, dull-witted, dull, slow-witted, witless, doltish, slow, dunce-like, simple-minded, empty-headed, vacuous, vapid, half-witted, idiotic, moronic, imbecilic
  • (as) thick as thieves

    • informal (of two or more people) very close or friendly; sharing secrets.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • I was in love with her, and for two years the two of us were thick as thieves.
      • The younger girl is drawn to Anita's rebellious streak and they soon become thick as thieves.
      • ‘He was seven years older than I, but even then, we were inseparable, thick as thieves,’ she said with a soft laugh.
      • Besides, I thought you two were as thick as thieves.
      • We were as thick as thieves and would share any secret with one another.
      • I can't remember how our friendship really got going, but before we knew it we were thick as thieves.
      • No wonder she and Claire were the best of friends and thick as thieves.
      • They lost interest in each other during the teenage years - by then it was all about rivalry - but now, as mothers themselves, they're as thick as thieves again.
      • In the olden days, Bryan and Justin had been as thick as thieves, closer than brothers, best friends for life.
      • ‘By the end, we were all thick as thieves,’ insists McCann.
      Synonyms
      friendly, intimate, familiar, on friendly terms, on good terms, on the best of terms, hand in glove
  • through thick and thin

    • Under all circumstances, no matter how difficult.

      they stuck together through thick and thin
      Example sentencesExamples
      • My friends have stuck by me through thick and thin, and I think, you know, it's what good friendship's about.
      • I've supported the club through thick and thin but this is all about making money.
      • He has done incredible service to the conservative cause through thick and thin, good times and bad, for well over a decade.
      • She gets her inspiration from her five great friends (though she has more than that), who have stuck with her through thick and thin.
      • Dogs will stand by your side through thick and thin.
      • As Sarah faces a possible future without the love of her life, she must push her fears aside and stand by James through thick and thin.
      • They stuck with their story through thick and thin at a time when the U.S. Army was denying that their units were even in that area.
      • We were always there for each other through thick and thin; no matter what happened.
      • The great-grandfather has been following the town's rugby league club, through thick and thin, for almost 80 years.
      • I've stuck with the franchise through thick and thin.

Origin

Old English thicce, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch dik and German dick.

 
 
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