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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
thickness
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
different
▪ You had to look inside the shoes to be able to judge the different thicknesses of sole and heel.
▪ Children like to handle scraps of material of different texture and thickness.
▪ Paper of different texture or thickness may be used.
▪ The brushes, too, may be of different thicknesses or lengths.
▪ Note that wall and floor types are of different thicknesses, just like ordinary ceramic tiles.
double
▪ Turn out the cake and wrap in a double thickness of greaseproof and foil until ready to decorate.
▪ They are then retained on the sail by tape made into double thickness tags.
▪ Stand tins on a baking tray lined with a double thickness of brown paper.
▪ The frill is obtained by sewing a channel through a double thickness of fabric below the top of the curtain.
▪ Cut round the design through the double thickness of paper.
▪ He pulled the double thickness of the cloak tighter around him and wondered briefly why he had not worn his hiking clothes.
▪ Strengthened key ring attachment. Double thickness on seat and knees.
full
▪ This study examined whether the phospholipid composition of the full thickness gastric mucosa is changed in peptic ulcer disease and gastritis.
▪ In eight of the 11 patients, full thickness intestinal biopsy specimens were available for histological examination.
▪ This extra truss member was designed to provide full thickness of insulation across the entire width of the house.
▪ We and others have described the histological characteristics of full thickness intestinal biopsies in patients with visceral myopathy and neuropathy.
▪ Histological examination of the resected colon confirmed Crohn's colitis with patchy full thickness inflammation and multiple granulomata.
▪ The number one remedy in third degree bums, that is, the full thickness of the skin has been lost.
great
▪ On an equal mass comparison, this further favours the composites because their low densities allow much greater panel thickness.
▪ Continental lithosphere stands higher than oceanic lithosphere because continental crust is both of greater thickness and lower density than oceanic crust.
▪ It also offers perimeter weighting, greater face thickness than any steel driver and feel and sound comparable with persimmon.
▪ The great thicknesses of the seams are impressive evidence of the abundance and persistence of the early forests.
▪ It would be possible to have a greater thickness of roof insulation if a trussed rafter roof were used.
■ NOUN
wall
▪ The fixing process is simple and clean, and only minimally increases wall thickness and adds little dead weight to the structure.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Flatten the meat to about 1/4-inch thickness.
▪ It's about the same thickness as a £1 coin.
▪ The cheese slicer can be adjusted to cut slices of different thicknesses.
▪ Wrap the spices in a double thickness of cloth.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ All this affects the weight and thickness of steel that the designer instructs the steel fabricators to supply for the beams.
▪ Grill the tuna steaks for 3 to 5 minutes per side, depending on thickness.
▪ On an equal mass comparison, this further favours the composites because their low densities allow much greater panel thickness.
▪ The fixing process is simple and clean, and only minimally increases wall thickness and adds little dead weight to the structure.
▪ The great thicknesses of the seams are impressive evidence of the abundance and persistence of the early forests.
▪ Upon one table lay a huge, dark-red object, about the thickness of my body.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Thickness

Thickness \Thick"ness\, n. [AS. ?icnes.] The quality or state of being thick (in any of the senses of the adjective).

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
thickness

Old English þicness "density, viscosity, hardness; depth; anything thick or heavy; darkness; thicket;" see thick + -ness.

Wiktionary
thickness

n. 1 (context uncountable English) The property of being thick (in dimension). 2 (context uncountable English) A measure of how thick (in dimension) something is. 3 (context countable English) A layer. 4 (context uncountable English) The quality of being thick (in consistency). 5 (context uncountable informal English) The property of being thick (slow to understand).

WordNet
thickness
  1. n. the dimension through an object as opposed to its length or width [ant: thinness]

  2. used of a line or mark [syn: heaviness]

  3. resistance to flow [ant: thinness]

Wikipedia
Thickness

Thickness may refer to:

  • Thickness (graph theory)
  • Thickness of layers in geology
  • Thickness (meteorology), the difference in height between two atmospheric pressure levels
  • Thickness planer a woodworking machine
  • Optical thickness in optics
  • Thickness, a concept in the game Go
Thickness (graph theory)

In graph theory, the thickness of a graph is the minimum number of planar graphs into which the edges of can be partitioned. That is, if there exists a collection of planar graphs, all having the same set of vertices, such that the union of these planar graphs is , then the thickness of is at most . In other words, the thickness of a graph is the minimum number of planar subgraphs whose union equals to graph .

Thus, a planar graph has thickness 1. Graphs of thickness 2 are called biplanar graphs. The concept of thickness originates in the 1962 conjecture of Frank Harary: For any graph on 9 points, either itself or its complementary graph is non-planar. The problem is equivalent to determining whether the complete graph is biplanar (it is not, and the conjecture is true). A comprehensive survey on the state of the arts of the topic as of 1998 was written by Petra Mutzel, Thomas Odenthal and Mark Scharbrodt.

Usage examples of "thickness".

Those that remained were vacuum ablating, their edges fraying like worn cloth, while their flat surfaces slowly dissolved, reducing their overall thickness.

And yet why should invertebrates outpace vertebrates in axon thickness when the vertebrates have the more highly developed nervous system?

These bipedal dinosaurs had very short forelimbs, but their unique feature was the unusual thickness of their skull roofs, which in several Late Cretaceous forms are fused into a single massive element forming a high dome.

That blubber is something of the consistence of firm, close-grained beef, but tougher, more elastic and compact, and ranges from eight or ten to twelve and fifteen inches in thickness.

This consultation, which I have still in my possession, says that our blood is an elastic fluid which is liable to diminish or to increase in thickness, but never in quantity, and that my haemorrhage could only proceed from the thickness of the mass of my blood, which relieved itself in a natural way in order to facilitate circulation.

The doctor added that I would have died long before, had not nature, in its wish for life, assisted itself, and he concluded by stating that the cause of the thickness of my blood could only be ascribed to the air I was breathing and that consequently I must have a change of air, or every hope of cure be abandoned.

The blubber, cut in parallel slices of two feet and a half in thickness, then divided into pieces which might weigh about a thousand pounds each, was melted down in large earthen pots brought to the spot, for they did not wish to taint the environs of Granite House, and in this fusion it lost nearly a third of its weight.

Only the foggish thickness of the drizzle had given them chance to lose The Shadow for short intervals.

In our archipelago, I believe that fossiliferous formations could be formed of sufficient thickness to last to an age, as distant in futurity as the secondary formations lie in the past, only during periods of subsidence.

Each radiating facet was a hexahedron tapering to a point, and all were of different thicknesses and lengths.

Conversely, a layer of liquid ether or of hydride of amyl, of this thickness, were its molecules freed from the thrall of cohesion, would form a column of vapor 38 inches long, at a pressure of 7.

Celts or knives made of jasper and yellowish jaspery slate, which range from 2 to 5 inches in length, and are less than 1 inch in width and half an inch in thickness.

She looked like a jock, or jockette, and people equated jocks with stupidity, or at least a certain rah-rah thickness.

He knew before he looked, the thickness of the jotter in his fingers--the page was different.

There was an evil-looking door of medieval thickness, knopped and studded and barred with forgework like something out of the Bastille, and inside that there was one of the nastiest concierges even Castang had ever met, and then there were five flights of crooked stairs, waxed till every uneven tread was its own separate deathtrap.