THICK vs COAGULATE: NOUN
- The location of something surrounded by other things
- Through all obstacles and difficulties, both great and small.
- The most active or intense part.
- The thickest part.
- The thickest part of anything.
- The densest or most crowded part; the place of greatest resort or abundance.
- The spot of greatest intensity or activity.
- The time when anything is thickest.
- A thicket; a coppice.
- A stupid person; a dullard; a blockhead; a numskull.
- The thickest part, or the time when anything is thickest.
- A fiddle block. See under Fiddle.
- A thicket.
- A mass formed by means of coagulation.
THICK vs COAGULATE: ADJECTIVE
- Going beyond what is tolerable; excessive.
- Very friendly; intimate.
- Very noticeable; pronounced.
- Lacking mental agility; stupid.
- (of darkness) very intense
- Relatively dense in consistency
- Abundantly covered or filled
- Abundant
- Spoken as if with a thick tongue
- Hard to pass through because of dense growth
- Wide from side to side
- Closely crowded together
- Having component parts in a close, crowded state or arrangement; dense.
- Used informally
- Relatively great in extent from one surface to the opposite, usually in the smallest solid dimension; not thin.
- Measuring a specified number of units in this dimension.
- Heavy in form, build, or stature; thickset.
- Having or suggesting a heavy or viscous consistency.
- Having a great number; abounding.
- Impenetrable by the eyes.
- Hard to hear or understand, as from being husky or slurred.
- Heavy and compact in form or stature
- 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
- Coagulated.
- Transformed from a liquid into a soft semisolid or solid mass
THICK vs COAGULATE: VERB
- To thicken.
- Cause to change from a liquid to a solid or thickened state
- Change from a liquid to a thickened or solid state
- To become congealed; to convert from a liquid to a semisolid mass.
- To cause to congeal.
THICK vs COAGULATE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To undergo coagulation.
- To become coagulated.
- To cause transformation of (a liquid or sol, for example) into or as if into a soft, semisolid, or solid mass.
THICK vs COAGULATE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To cause (a liquid) to change into a curdlike or semisolid state, not by evaporation but by some kind of chemical reaction; to curdle.
THICK vs COAGULATE: ADVERB
- So as to be thick; thickly.
- In a close, compact state or arrangement; densely.
- In a thick manner; deeply or heavily.
- In quick succession
- With a thick consistency
- N/A
THICK vs COAGULATE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- 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 a lot of
- Being of a specified number; numbering.
- Close in friendship; intimate.
- In a thick manner, in any sense.
- 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.
- Having component parts closely crowded together
- 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 numerous separate parts or individuals set or occurring close together; dense; compactly arranged.
- 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.
- Heavy; profound; intense; extreme; great.
- Obscure; not clear; especially, laden with clouds or vapor; misty; foggy: noting the atmosphere, the weather, etc.
- Mentally dull; stupid: devoid of intelligence: as, to have a thick head.
- 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.
- Indistinct in utterance; inarticulate; not clear.
- Abounding; filled; plentifully supplied: followed by with (formerly of or for).
- 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.
- Numerous; plentiful; frequent; crowded.
- (idiom) (thick and thin) Good and bad times.
- To become crystallized.
- To curdle or become clotted; congeal or become congealed.
- To crystallize.
- To curdle; congeal; clot; change from a fluid into a curd-like or thickened mass: as, to coagulate blood; rennet coagulates milk.
- Coagulated; curdled; clotted.
THICK vs COAGULATE: RELATED WORDS
- Stocky, Heavy, Syrupy, Viscous, Deep, Clotted, Gelatinous, Creamy, Ropy, Soupy, Impenetrable, Stringy, Jellylike, Thickened, Dense
- Bleed, Liquify, Reabsorb, Denature, Thicken, Emulsify, Curdle, Congeal, Gore, Gel, Grumous, Grumose, Thick, Curdled, Clot
THICK vs COAGULATE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Stocky, Heavy, Syrupy, Viscous, Deep, Clotted, Gelatinous, Creamy, Ropy, Soupy, Impenetrable, Stringy, Jellylike, Thickened, Dense
- Oxidise, Macerate, Dissolve, Bleed, Liquify, Reabsorb, Denature, Thicken, Congeal, Gel, Grumous, Grumose, Thick, Curdled, Clot
THICK vs COAGULATE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- 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.
- Doth every spirit coagulate the spirit of wine?
- Should they adhere to each other, the particles would rapidly coagulate into a single mass.
- Coagulate any bleeding tissue in the crater base using a ball electrode and coagulation current.
- Because the particles can approach each other more closely, they are able to coagulate.
- Coagulate the past couple of reddit veins in my are more prominent.
- In rural areas, the milk is left to coagulate and turn sour.
- Boiling an egg will denature and coagulate the protein in it.
- Words like create, idiom, and coagulate all show the VV pattern.
- Any remaining curds begin to coagulate, growing larger and more solid.
- Coagulate having food preservative in urban route planning oil.
THICK vs COAGULATE: QUESTIONS
- 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?
- How do you coagulate blood with different blood groups?
- Can I use rennet instead of citric acid to coagulate cheese?
- How long to let blood coagulate at room temperature?
- Does heating milk cause denatured casein proteins to coagulate?
- Why does menstrual blood not coagulate in the body?