/θɪk/, /θɘk/
OriginFrom Middle English thikke, from Old English þicce (“thick, dense”), from Proto-West Germanic *þikkwī, from Proto-Germanic *þekuz (“thick”), from Proto-Indo-European *tégus (“thick”).
Cognates
Cognate with North Frisian sjok, tjok, tjuk, tschok (“thick”), Saterland Frisian tjuk (“thick”), West Frisian dik, tuuk (“thick”), Central Franconian deck (“thick”), Cimbrian dikh, dikhe (“thick”), Dutch dik (“thick”), German dick (“thick”), Luxembourgish déck (“thick”), Yiddish דיק (dik, “thick”), Danish tyk (“thick”), Elfdalian tiokk (“thick”), Faroese tjúkkur (“thick”), Icelandic þykkur (“thick”), Norwegian Bokmål and Norwegian Nynorsk tjukk, tykk (“thick”), Scanian tjykker (“thick”), Swedish tjock (“thick”); also Cornish and Welsh tew (“thick”), Irish tiubh, tiugh (“thick”), Manx çhiu (“thick”), Scottish Gaelic tiugh (“thick”).
- Relatively great in extent from one surface to the opposite in its smallest solid dimension.
“The thickest salmon, the curdiest trout, the fattest partridge, and the most tender woodcock smoked on his board, and, rumor said, cooked with a delicacy that more pretentious houses could not rival.”
“The face which emerged was not reassuring. It was blunt and grey, the nose springing thick and flat from high on the frontal bone of the forehead, whilst his eyes were narrow slits of dark in a tight ”
- Measuring a certain number of units in this dimension.
“I want some planks that are two inches thick.”
- Heavy in build; thickset.
“He had such a thick neck that he had to turn his body to look to the side.”
“As she twirled around in front of the mirror admiring how the dress showed off her thick booty, she felt like a princess in a children's storybook.”
“JJ loved “average hood girls”, Cody loved dark-skinned thick girls and Mooch lusted for yellow-boned skinny woman.”
- Densely crowded or packed.
“My hopes wa'n't disappointed. I never saw clams thicker than they was along them inshore flats. I filled my dreener in no time, and then it come to me that 'twouldn't be a bad idee to get a lot more, ”
“We walked through thick undergrowth.”
- Having a viscous consistency.
“My mum’s gravy was thick but at least it moved about.”
- Abounding in number.
“The room was thick with reporters.”
“Seashells lay thick on the beach.”
- Impenetrable to sight.
“We drove through thick fog.”
- Greatly evocative of one's nationality or place of origin.
“He answered me in his characteristically thick Creole patois.”
- Difficult to understand, or poorly articulated.
“We had difficulty understanding him with his thick accent.”
- informalStupid.
“He was as thick as two short planks.”
- informalFriendly or intimate.
“They were as thick as thieves.”
“Jem is a tall, good-looking fellow, as old as I am, and that's twenty-one last birthday; we came into the office together years ago, and have been very thick ever since”
- Deep, intense, or profound.
- literaryDetailed and expansive; substantive.
“Thick prehistory also is interested in a much broader array of topics than the perennial sociological concern for how individuals relate to the collective and how social continuity and change occur in”
“A thick theory, such as libertarianism or socialism, is not appropriate as the basis for a constitution in a pluralistic society in which the people hold differing views about the good (or justice).”
“Nor is his defence of market capitalism likely to persuade all his progressive friends, because no matter how much fairness is achieved through an application of the difference principle, they are rel”
- UK, datedTroublesome; unreasonable.
““Screaming headlines in every paper in the country—damn all journalists, I say! Do you know there was a whole crowd staring in at the lodge gates this morning. Sort of Madame Tussaud’s chamber of horr”
“"Of course I was eager to put her affairs in order," George told my father, "but I found it a bit thick when expected to pay for Lord Randolph Churchill's barouche purchased in the '80s."”
- slangCurvy and voluptuous, and especially having large hips.
“A word to the thick soul sistas, I want to get with ya”
- In a thick manner.
“Snow lay thick on the ground.”
- Frequently or numerously.
“The arrows flew thick and fast around us.”
- The thickest, or most active or intense, part of something.
“It was mayhem in the thick of battle.”
“He through a little window cast his sight / Through thick of bars, that gave a scanty light.”
- A thicket.
“gloomy thicks”
“Through the thicke they heard one rudely rush.”
- slangA stupid person; a fool.
“If there was doctorates in bollocksology and scratching yourself in bed, the two of you'd be professors by now. Pair of loafing, idle thicks.”
- ambitransitive, archaicTo thicken.
“A wicked ambush , which lay hidden long In the close covert of her guilful eyen,
Thence breaking forth , did thick about me throng”
“The nightmare Life-in-death was she, / Who thicks man's blood with cold.”
Formsthicker(comparative) · thickest(superlative) · thicks(plural) · thicks(present, singular, third-person) · thicking(participle, present) · thicked(participle, past) · thicked(past)