thick in English
- thick⇄adj. 1. with much space from one side to the opposite side; not thin.
Ex. a thick plank, a thick layer of paint. The castle has thick stone walls.
2. measuring (so much) between two opposite sides.
Ex. This brick is 8 inches long, 4 in - thick⇄adv. in a thick manner; thickly.
- thick⇄expr. lay it on thick, (Slang.) to praise or blame too much.
Ex. Isn't the bloke laying it on a bit thick, even for the American tourists? (Maclean's). - thick⇄expr. thick and fast, in close or rapid succession; quickly.
Ex. The cars came thick and fast during the rush hour. Now things started to happen thick and fast (Jonathan Eberhart). - thick⇄expr. through thick and thin, in good times and bad.
Ex. A true friend sticks through thick and thin. There's five hundred men here to back you up through thick and thin (Hall Caine). - thick⇄noun 1. the thickest part.
2. (Figurative.) the hardest part; place where there is the most danger or activity.
Ex. King Arthur was in the thick of the fight. - thick⇄thick, adjective, adverb, noun, verb.
- thick⇄v.t., v.i. (Archaic.) to thicken.
Ex. The nightmare Life-in-Death was she, Who thicks men's blood with cold (Samuel Taylor Coleridge).
thick in Gujarati ગુજરાતી
thick in Sindhi سنڌي
thick in Tamil தமிழ்
No additional English content available for 'thick'.