Thick
adjectiveAdjective
(of darkness) densely dark
“thick night”
“thick darkness”
Similar:Deephard to pass through because of dense growth
“thick woods”
Similar:Densespoken as if with a thick tongue
“the thick speech of a drunkard”
Similar:Slurredhaving a short and solid form or stature
“a thickset young man”
(used informally) associated on close terms
“the two were thick as thieves for months”
Similar:Buddy-buddyChummynot thin; of a specific thickness or of relatively great extent from one surface to the opposite usually in the smallest of the three solid dimensions
“an inch thick”
“a thick board”
“a thick sandwich”
See also:FatWideBroadhaving component parts closely crowded together
“thick crowds”
“a thick forest”
“thick hair”
relatively dense in consistency
“thick cream”
“thick soup”
“thick smoke”
abounding; having a lot of
“the top was thick with dust”
(used informally) stupid
Similar:BlockheadedBoneheadedDuncicalDuncishFatheaded
Noun
the location of something surrounded by other things
Similar:MidstType of:InsideInterior
Adverb
in quick succession
“misfortunes come fast and thick”
Similar:Thicklywith a thick consistency
“the blood was flowing thick”
Similar:Thickly
Dictionary Validity
- Tournament Word List (TWL)
- Scrabble US
- Collins Scrabble Words (CSW21)
- Scrabble UK
- ENABLE Dictionary
- Words With Friends
- Combined US/UK Scrabble Dictionary
- SOWPODS
- North American Scrabble (NWL2020)
- NASPA