“thick” some ways to use

How to use in-sentence of “thick”:

+ Continental plate is the thick part of the earth’s crust which forms the large land masses.

+ The thick forests of the Ardennes would make movement difficult.

+ The actual Puerto Montt was discovered by a thick forest man who founded the city as “Melipulli” on 1853.

+ During the flight the plane crashed into the hills near Jinan because of the thick fog.

+ For instance, the xanthan gum added to salad dressing makes the dressing thick enough to cling to a salad, but shaking the bottle of dressing makes it temporarily thin and easier to pour.

thick some ways to use
thick some ways to use

Example sentences of “thick”:

+ Unlike other gas giants, Neptune’s atmosphere shows the presence of high clouds making shadows on a thick cloud deck below.

+ The outer layer is a thick covering made of stretchy tissue.

+ This dye stains peptidoglycan, a thick layer that is only found in gram-positive bacteria.

+ Although it is mainly called “pancake” in the English speaking countries and it is thin dough, in Mexico, it is called “hotcake” and it is often thick dough.

+ The overall appearance is that of a thick disk.

+ Very thick clouds with large enough water droplets can make rain or snow, and the biggest clouds can make thunder and lightning.

+ This dinosaur is only known from a single skull and a few extremely thick skull roofs.

+ Their short body is covered by a thick exoskeleton.

+ Unlike other gas giants, Neptune's atmosphere shows the presence of high clouds making shadows on a thick cloud deck below.

+ The outer layer is a thick covering made of stretchy tissue.

+ Weapons of iron, bronze, or stone could not pierce the lion’s thick hide.

+ Humans hunt them for their beautiful, thick fur.

+ They often have reduced body hair, thick exoskeleton, and saber-like mandibles.

+ They use layers of cut totora, a thick reed that grows in Lake Titicaca.

+ There are two kinds of coconut milk: thick and thin.

+ The thick armor and high mobility make it one of the best protected tanks in the world.

More in-sentence examples of “thick”:

+ Inside the fruiting bodies, cells develop into rounded myxospores with thick cell walls.

+ It comes in many different types such as the very thick "cioccolata densa" in Italy, and the thinner hot cocoa that is usually drunk in the United States.
+ Their coat is thick and comes in colors from light gray to black or from sable to red.

+ Inside the fruiting bodies, cells develop into rounded myxospores with thick cell walls.

+ It comes in many different types such as the very thick “cioccolata densa” in Italy, and the thinner hot cocoa that is usually drunk in the United States.

+ Their coat is thick and comes in colors from light gray to black or from sable to red.

+ It means the paint is laid on thickly in places, thick enough so the brush or painting-knife strokes can be seen.

+ Katydids and crickets usually have long, thin antennae, while grasshoppers usually have short, thick ones.

+ The mechanical advantage of a wedge is the length of the sloping side of the wedge and divide it by the length of the thick end of the wedge.

+ At the end of the ice age, the three-mile thick ice sheet over Britain north of the Thames melted.

+ Other ones can be made out of thick plastic.

+ It took the executioner four blows to sever Jelckama’s head from his extremely thick neck.

+ Earwigs have thin back wings and two thick wings to cover the thin wings..

+ This thick fluid helps carry solids cut by the drill bit up to the surface of the earth.

+ Some have larger teeth, some had smaller dagger-like teeth, some had smooth thick teeth, others had blade-like teeth, sometimes with serrated edges.

+ A thin pure piece of copper and a thick impure piece of copper are placed in copper sulfate solution.

+ This causes the endometrium – the thick lining of the uterus – to leave the woman’s body through menstruation.

+ In the east of the island is mountainous terrain with thick forests and endemic types of plants and animals such as the Formasan Black Bear and the Formosan Cypress.

+ They can stay warm because they have a thick layer of blubber.

+ In late February, leaves start to appear and produce a fresh, thick crown by April.

+ The links were made of thick wire with a loop at each end.

+ It is thick and has a medium color.

+ Lenard was able to make small metallic windows in the glass, thick enough to be able to withstand the pressure, but thin enough to let the rays pass through.

+ Then the beans are removed and piled in heaps, bins, or on grates where, during several days of “sweating”, the thick pulp ferments until it thins and trickles off.

+ Felsic magma is thick and has silica minerals.

+ Marine mammals have thick layers of fat under their skin, which is better insulation than wet fur.

+ They use a thick gluey goo called “mucilage” to trap and digestiondigest their prey.The mucilage is attached to special hairs called trichomes.

+ A wall that is just one brick thick has one wythe.

+ They are small to medium-sized birds with short, thick necks and long, usually pointed, wings.

+ Their feathers are very tightly packed and make a thick cover.

+ Broad-leaved evergreen forests grow in the mountainous areas to the north, with trees 100feet high emerging from thick undergrowths of vines, rattans, palms, bamboos, and assorted woody and herbaceous ground plants.

+ Because there is a vacuum inside the tube, and the tube must be glass for the phosphor to be visible, the tube must be made of thick glass.

+ Part of the volcano’s southwest flank built out onto thick glacial ice filling the Squamish River valley.

+ At the end of the meal, the liquid from the pot is drunk as a thick soup.

+ The darkness of the Horsehead is caused by thick dust blocking the light of stars behind it.

+ The dough is made out of flour and water, combined into a thick batter.

+ In Canada, it is shown by a thick bar followed by a thin bar and again by a thick bar.

+ Tammar wallabies live in thick scrub during the day and come out into grassland to feed at night.

+ A taproot system has one thick main root growing down from the plant’s Plant stemstem, and lots of smaller “secondary roots” branching off from this.

+ They were decorated with geometric or schematic designs, with thick cloison walls.

+ It has a 93.4m thick lake ice.Hodgson D.A., S.J.

+ A potage is a category of thick soups, stews or porridges.

+ The excavations at Akrotiri have confirmed that human activity on the island continued until the eruption of the volcano around 1500 B.C, which entirely buried the island beneath very thick layers of pozzuolona.

+ The soils are shallow and often are above large sheets of laterite and a thick profile of strongly leached rocks.

+ How thick or how coarse the clothing was related to the season in which it was worn.

+ The mesoglea of medusae is a thick and springy jelly, so it returns to its original shape after muscles around the edge have contracted.

+ Stoats are long and thin with short legs, small ears, and thick warm fur.

+ At first, there is thick winter fog.

+ The speed at which the signal travels depends on how thick the axon is, and how much insulation it has.

+ The beluga’s body is stout and has a small, blunt head with a small beak, tiny eyes and thick layers of blubber.

+ In the modern world they play the role which thick forest undergrowth would have played in an ancient ecology.

+ Cedars are trees up to tall with spicy-scented wood, thick ridged or square-cracked bark, and broad, level branches.

+ Its legs were said to be strong, with thick and short hind legs and long legs in front.

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