DENSE vs THICK: NOUN
- A thicket.
- Through all obstacles and difficulties, both great and small.
- A fiddle block. See under Fiddle.
- A thicket.
- The thickest part, or the time when anything is thickest.
- A stupid person; a dullard; a blockhead; a numskull.
- A thicket; a coppice.
- The time when anything is thickest.
- The spot of greatest intensity or activity.
- The densest or most crowded part; the place of greatest resort or abundance.
- The thickest part of anything.
- The most active or intense part.
- The thickest part.
- The location of something surrounded by other things
DENSE vs THICK: ADJECTIVE
- Of a person, slow to comprehend; of low intelligence.
- Being a subset of a topological space that approximates the space well. See Wikipedia article on dense sets for mathematical definition.
- Obscure, or difficult to understand.
- Opaque; allowing little light to pass through.
- Thick; difficult to penetrate.
- Compact; crowded together.
- Stupid; gross; crass.
- Having the constituent parts massed or crowded together; close; compact; thick; containing much matter in a small space; heavy; opaque
- Slow to apprehend; thickheaded.
- Difficult to understand because of complexity or obscurity.
- Opaque, with good contrast between light and dark areas. Used of a photographic negative.
- Permitting little light to pass through, because of compactness of matter.
- Hard to penetrate; thick.
- Crowded closely together; compact.
- Having relatively high density.
- Closely crowded together
- Having high relative density or specific gravity
- Slow to learn or understand; lacking intellectual acuity
- Permitting little if any light to pass through because of denseness of matter
- Hard to pass through because of dense growth
- Going beyond what is tolerable; excessive.
- Very friendly; intimate.
- Lacking mental agility; stupid.
- Very noticeable; pronounced.
- Hard to hear or understand, as from being husky or slurred.
- Impenetrable by the eyes.
- Having a great number; abounding.
- Having or suggesting a heavy or viscous consistency.
- Having component parts in a close, crowded state or arrangement; dense.
- Heavy in form, build, or stature; thickset.
- Measuring a specified number of units in this dimension.
- Relatively great in extent from one surface to the opposite, usually in the smallest solid dimension; not thin.
- Used informally
- Heavy and compact in form or stature
- Closely crowded together
- Wide from side to side
- Hard to pass through because of dense growth
- Spoken as if with a thick tongue
- Abundant
- Abundantly covered or filled
- Relatively dense in consistency
- Not 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
- (of darkness) very intense
DENSE vs THICK: VERB
- N/A
- To thicken.
DENSE vs THICK: ADVERB
- N/A
- So as to be thick; thickly.
- In a close, compact state or arrangement; densely.
- In a thick manner; deeply or heavily.
- With a thick consistency
- In quick succession
DENSE vs THICK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Lacking intellectual acuity
- Slow to learn or understand
- Having component parts closely crowded together
- Synonyms Condensed, compressed.
- Thick-headed; obtuse; stolid; stupid; dull.
- Figuratively, without break or interruption; difficult to penetrate; solid and heavy: as, dense ignorance; dense wit; dense stupidity.
- In photography, more or less opaque; strong in the contrast of lights and shades: said of a negative exhibiting these characteristics, and capable of giving a brilliant print, or even, if it be too dense, a harsh one, as distinguished from a weak or thin negative, the picture on which presents small contrasts, while its film is inclined to be more or less transparent, even in the lights, and the resulting print is flat. Also expressed by strong and intense.
- In zoology, closely set; separated by very small intervals: as. dense punctures, hairs, etc.
- Having great or unusual consistency of elements or closeness of parts; closely compacted or conglomerated; compact; close; thick: as, a dense body; a dense cloud or fog; a dense panicle of flowers.
- In optics, having a large index of refraction; capable of transmitting light at a less velocity than the velocity of light-waves in vacuo.
- Having a lot of
- Abounding
- Not thin
- Abounding; having a lot of
- (used informally) stupid
- (used informally) associated on close terms
- (of darkness) densely dark
- Having a short and solid form or stature
- Having component parts closely crowded together
- To become thick.
- To make obscure or dark; hence, to hide; conceal.
- To give firmer consistency to; inspissate.
- To increase in depth or girth; swell the proportions of (a solid body); fatten.
- To make thick; thicken.
- Close in friendship; intimate.
- Being of a specified number; numbering.
- Numerous; plentiful; frequent; crowded.
- Abounding; filled; plentifully supplied: followed by with (formerly of or for).
- Indistinct in utterance; inarticulate; not clear.
- Mentally clouded; befogged; slow, weak, or defective in sense-perception, sometimes in moral perception: as, to be thick of sight, hearing, etc.: said of persons or of the organs of sense.
- Mentally dull; stupid: devoid of intelligence: as, to have a thick head.
- Obscure; not clear; especially, laden with clouds or vapor; misty; foggy: noting the atmosphere, the weather, etc.
- Heavy; profound; intense; extreme; great.
- Having relatively great consistency; also, containing much solid matter in suspension or solution; approaching the consistency of a solid; inspissated: as, thick cream; thick paste; often of liquids, turbid; muddy; cloudy.
- Having numerous separate parts or individuals set or occurring close together; dense; compactly arranged.
- Having (a specified) measurement in a direction perpendicular to that of the length and breadth; measuring (so much) between opposite surfaces: as, a board one inch thick.
- Having relatively great extent or depth from one surface to its opposite; being relatively of great depth, or extent from side to side: opposed to thin.
- In a thick manner, in any sense.
- (idiom) (thick and thin) Good and bad times.
DENSE vs THICK: RELATED WORDS
- Opaque, Compacted, Densities, Density, Stupid, Dumb, Slow, Dim, Dull, Concentrated, Heavy, Obtuse, Compact, Impenetrable, Thick
- Stocky, Heavy, Syrupy, Viscous, Deep, Clotted, Gelatinous, Creamy, Ropy, Soupy, Impenetrable, Stringy, Jellylike, Thickened, Dense
DENSE vs THICK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Populated, Opaque, Compacted, Density, Stupid, Dumb, Slow, Dim, Dull, Concentrated, Heavy, Obtuse, Compact, Impenetrable, Thick
- Stocky, Heavy, Syrupy, Viscous, Deep, Clotted, Gelatinous, Creamy, Ropy, Soupy, Impenetrable, Stringy, Jellylike, Thickened, Dense
DENSE vs THICK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Actin filaments are anchored by dense bodies and dense bands, which are linked together by intermediate filaments.
- It is dense clay containing fragments and strata of dense and fractured noncemented claystone that weathers to silty clay or clay texture.
- The intersection of a countable family of open dense subsets of a complete metric space is dense.
- Dense mode if there is a PIM Dense mode application, otherwise conufb01gure the interfaces for PIM Sparse mode.
- If we combine two liquids that do not mix, the less dense one will float on the more dense one.
- Objects and water can become more dense or less dense if molecules or heat is added or taken away.
- One easy way to combat this is by consuming low energy dense foods, which are also nutrient dense and promote fat loss.
- Iceborne is one very dense expansion for a very dense game.
- Corollary: A closed subset is nowhere dense iff its complement is dense.
- There are two kinds of Redshift clusters, Dense Compute and Dense Storage.
- This is a fairly thick scented hair oil.
- Of course, our dossiers are about this thick.
- Designed for grass, garden debris and thick weeds.
- You mentioned this bloodweed has thick, woody stalks.
- The Safe House is a thick, concrete block.
- Team leaders are in the thick of things.
- Mine is as thick as it was before this happened, it is still dry but not falling out and is thick again.
- The wall of the blastocyst is one cell thick except in one area, where it is three to four cells thick.
- Raft foundation is a thick concrete slab reinforced with steel which covers the entire contact area of the structure like a thick floor.
- The top foliage seems healthy and thick, in fact too thick for the thin stems to support unaided.
DENSE vs THICK: QUESTIONS
- Do dense breasts laws increase breast density awareness?
- Are gas giants more dense than terrestrial planets?
- What is the architecture of dense connective tissue?
- Why choose Magnum systems for dense phase conveying?
- Are trigonometric polynomials dense on the unit circle?
- What is storage dense configuration for vSAN (s3260)?
- What to avoid with dense pack cellulose insulation?
- Is the dose-dense paclitaxel regimen generalisable?
- Do less dense materials occupy more volume than more dense materials?
- What are the Earths layers from most dense to least dense?
- How thick should plasterboard be for Artex ceiling?
- What are the important points regarding thick cylinders?
- How thick is the checkerboard formation in Oklahoma?
- Which cleansing conditioner is best for thick hair?
- How thick is a pioneer reinforced concrete sleeper?
- How thick is galvanized tubular in the Philippines?
- How thick is Victorian repeat pattern etched glass?
- Does the Microtouch Switchblade really cut thick hair?
- Is there an obsession with thick but not actually thick eyebrows?
- How thick are hardwood floors thick enough to refinish?