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thick
adjective
-
thick
,
thicker
,
thickest
having
a
wide
distance
from
one
surface
or
side
to
the
opposite
one
,
not
thin
•
The
castle
had
thick
stone
walls
that
kept
out
the
cold
.
The
castle
had
thick
stone
walls
that
kept
out
the
cold
.
•
He
put
on
a
pair
of
thick
wool
socks
before
hiking
.
He
put
on
a
pair
of
thick
wool
socks
before
hiking
.
adjective
-
thick
,
thicker
,
thickest
closely
packed
together
;
dense
•
A
cloud
of
thick
smoke
rose
from
the
chimney
.
A
cloud
of
thick
smoke
rose
from
the
chimney
.
•
The
forest
was
so
thick
that
little
sunlight
reached
the
ground
.
The
forest
was
so
thick
that
little
sunlight
reached
the
ground
.
adjective
-
thick
,
thicker
,
thickest
describing
a
liquid
that
is
heavy
and
does
not
flow
easily
•
She
stirred
the
soup
until
it
became
thick
and
creamy
.
She
stirred
the
soup
until
it
became
thick
and
creamy
.
•
The
painter
used
thick
paint
to
add
texture
to
the
canvas
.
The
painter
used
thick
paint
to
add
texture
to
the
canvas
.
adjective
-
thick
,
thicker
,
thickest
describing
a
voice
or
accent
that
is
strong
or
hard
to
understand
•
He
spoke
English
with
a
thick
Irish
accent
.
He
spoke
English
with
a
thick
Irish
accent
.
•
Her
voice
was
thick
with
emotion
as
she
thanked
the
crowd
.
Her
voice
was
thick
with
emotion
as
she
thanked
the
crowd
.
adjective
-
thick
,
thicker
,
thickest
informal
:
slow
to
understand
;
not
intelligent
•
I'm
not
being
thick
—
could
you
explain
that
again
?
I'm
not
being
thick
—
could
you
explain
that
again
?
•
They
called
him
thick
because
he
failed
the
simplest
quiz
.
They
called
him
thick
because
he
failed
the
simplest
quiz
.
adverb
closely
together
or
in
large
numbers
;
densely
•
The
snow
fell
thick
all
night
.
The
snow
fell
thick
all
night
.
•
Rumors
ran
thick
in
the
small
town
after
the
scandal
.
Rumors
ran
thick
in
the
small
town
after
the
scandal
.