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Like tomes, typically
Answer for the clue "Like tomes, typically ", 5 letters:
thick
Alternative clues for the word thick
Word definitions for thick in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Thick may refer to: The opposite of thin A bulky or heavyset body shape Thick (album) , 1999 fusion jazz album by Tribal Tech Thick concept , in philosophy, a concept that is both descriptive and evaluative Thick description , in anthropology, a description ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Thick \Thick\, n. The thickest part, or the time when anything is thickest. In the thick of the dust and smoke. --Knolles. A thicket; as, gloomy thicks. [Obs.] --Drayton. Through the thick they heard one rudely rush. --Spenser. He through a little window ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a strong/broad/thick/pronounced accent (= very noticeable ) ▪ She spoke with a strong Scottish accent. ▪ a broad Australian accent a thick slice ▪ Cut the aubergine into thick slices. a thick/dense forest (= ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. the location of something surrounded by other things; "in the midst of the crowd" [syn: midst ]
Usage examples of thick.
The spider legs of the Aberrant flexed within a few feet of her, each as thick as her arm, encircling the heaving flanks of the thrashing beast.
He had given the name of Stanley Adams, and had had such a queerly thick droning voice, that it made the clerk abnormally dizzy and sleepy to listen to him.
It was filled not quite to the brim with a mass of what looked like thick red slime and it bubbled continuously as if aboil on some gigantic stove.
The briefing officer had a thick accent, but it was German, not Spanish.
Good gracious, but his deep masculine voice was rich, with a thick, lilting accent that could only be described as musical.
Surprisingly, Ace found plenty of dry wood under the thick growth of trees.
The trees had the thickest of canopies, stunningly clothed in the reds and golds and russets of their autumn canopies: I spent many an hour while Achates slept in my arms watching their seductive dancing against the sky.
The braziers began giving off a thick, resinous, overly sweet smoke with something astringent to it but I had no way of knowing if it was, in fact, the perfume the grimoire had specified for operations ruled by the planet Mercury: a mixture of mastic, frankincense, cinquefoil, achates, and the dried and powdered brains of a fox.
She followed the girl through the wardrobe and into the small passageway between the thick adobe walls.
Gian nodded, the motion sent that front flipped curl into an adorable jiggle off the sides of his thick auburn brows.
To drag a cloud of white aerophane behind her over a thick, soft carpet, with three eligible young men in full contemplation of her peerless beauty, was as delicious as though she had been an actress receiving an overwhelming ovation.
His blue eyes were afire now, his Scots accent growing thicker by the second.
Fully afrown, I paused by a window to draw aside the thin cloth which covered it, immediately discovering the presence of thick, heavy raindrops covering the outside of the maglessa-weave panes.
There were no shore power cables on the ship but a heavy gantry with thick cables had been retracted aft near the rudder.
Both also were almost physical carbon copies of their ageless mother except for higher-pitched voices and thicker lips.