From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbe thick with somebodybe thick with somebodyold-fashioned to be very friendly with someone → thickExamples from the Corpusbe thick with somebody• Everywhere was thick with greenish slime and off-white guano in this great bird slum.
Dating back to the 1990s, thick is black slang describing a sexually attractive woman, usually voluptuous or curvaceous. By the early 2000s, the slang was being deliberately misspelled online as thicc, like phat for fat.
As in, thick thighs and butt. But mostly thighs. If someone is thicc they are mostly slim but have bigger thighs and hips.
To cry 'Hold, hold! ' Note how 'thick', formerly applied to Lady Macbeth's blood, now refers to the night: it's as if those spirits are already rushing through the darkness to attend on her, and having thickened the air they will go to work on her blood.
Thick meaning dull/stupid is probably common to all major varieties of English, but the senses of thick detailed above seem restricted to colloquial Irish English.
Hi - You know the Dublin word mot/moth for girlfriend.
Beor. While scholars differ over the exact spelling of the word, they all agree it indicates a thoroughly attractive individual. Example: "Did anyone ever tell you that you're some beor?"
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
What Is Their Main Difference? Both are used to describe a person's appearance, especially women's. However, 'thick' indicates women that are a bit plump and sexually attractive, whereas, 'fat' refers to an overweight person.
FATC stands for Full Automatic Temperature Controller (automotive)
But the meaning has since transformed, with Urban Dictionary recently defining it as when “a person has fat in the right places, creating sexy curves”. People have applied the word to anything that features curves, from cartoon characters such as The Incredibles Elastigirl, animals and even inanimate objects.
Thick is used more exclusively to sexualize women, referring to full-figured breasts, bottoms, and thighs.
(informal) An older girl or grown-up girl; a girl who is no longer an infant. You can tie your own shoelaces – you're a big girl now. (informal, derogatory) A timid, weak or effeminate boy or man. Stop crying, you big girl!
If you describe someone as thick, you think they are stupid. [British, informal, disapproval] How could she have been so thick? Synonyms: stupid, dull, dense, insensitive More Synonyms of thick.
There's not much difference, really. “Chubby” is a semi-polite word for someone who's fat but not morbidly obese. “Thick” is just another word for fat but not incredibly so. There's also pudgy, fluffy, porky, plus-size…
Thicc isn't standard English, but it refers to curvy or voluptuous women. It comes from thick, but thick also has the meaning of slow-witted or stupid. So, if you are referring to a woman as "thick", readers may think that you are calling her stupid. If she is "thicc", she is curvy.
Come to my woman's breasts, / And take my milk for gall,” Lady Macbeth says as she prepares herself to commit murder. The language suggests that her womanhood, represented by breasts and milk, usually symbols of nurture, impedes her from performing acts of violence and cruelty, which she associates with manliness.
Of direst cruelty! (Macbeth, Act 1, Scene 5) In Act 1 of Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, sensing her husband's shaky resolve in committing murder to secure the crown of Scotland, asks spirits to “unsex” her ‑ to take away the “weaknesses” associated with being female.
This quote spoken by Lady Macbeth portrays how she is willing and wanting to give up her femininity and become a man, all for the sake of the plot against King Duncan. She directly opposes the common Elizabethan idea that women are nurturers and givers of life.
Shift: Irish slang for kissing/frenching/pashing/snogging/making out Can be used in both verb and noun forms, noun always taking the definite article.
Ah Irish flirting, it can be a mind-boggling thing. Rather than just coming out and admitting that he fancies you, the Irish male has a unique way of registering his interest and, more times than not, it involves messing with you, asking about your da and being a bit cheeky.
Noun. diddley-eye (uncountable) (Ireland, informal, often derogatory) Old style traditional Irish music, typically with tin whistles, banjos, and bodhrans.
Coddle (sometimes Dublin coddle; Irish: cadal) is an Irish dish which is often made to use up leftovers. It most commonly consists of layers of roughly sliced pork sausages and rashers (thinly sliced, somewhat-fatty back bacon) with chunky potatoes, sliced onion, salt, pepper, and herbs (parsley or chives).
“Mo chara” is used for a man or “Mo cara” is for a woman; “Mo Anam Cara” means "my soul mate" and can be found on one of our necklaces, bracelets, rings and even framed art. “A stór” (uh STORE): Literally means “my treasure.” Can be used in an affectionate friendship or as a term of endearment to a child.