Thic


THIC
The Heart Institute for Children

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  • Thick

    adjective, thicker, thickest. 1. having relatively great extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thin: a thick slice. 2. measured, as specified, between opposite surfaces, from top to bottom, or in a direction perpendicular to that of the length and breadth; (of a solid having three general dimensions) measured across its smallest […]

  • Thick and fast

    Rapidly crowding, coming so fast they run together, as in The questions came at him thick and fast . This term originated in the second half of the 1500s as thick and threefold and was replaced by the current version about 1700. For a synonym, see fast and furious

  • Thick as thieves

    Intimate, closely allied, as in The sisters-in-law are thick as thieves. This term uses thick in the sense of “intimate,” a usage that is obsolete except in this simile. [ Early 1800s ]

  • Thick clay

    (Hab. 2:6) is correctly rendered in the Revised Version “pledges.” The Chaldean power is here represented as a rapacious usurer, accumulating the wealth that belonged to others.

  • Thick client

    noun 1. (computing) a computer having its own hard drive, as opposed to one on a network where most functions are carried out on a central server See thin client


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