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
No additional English content available for 'thick'.