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adj

thin

THIHN
adj
1
Having little distance between opposite surfaces; not thick.
"She sliced the bread into thin, even pieces."
2
Having little body fat; slim or lean.
"He looked thin after weeks of illness."
"The greyhound was thin but incredibly fast."
3
Runny; of low viscosity.
"Add water if the paint is too thin."
4
Sparse; not densely packed or crowded.
"Attendance at the meeting was thin this week."
5
Weak or unconvincing, said of an argument, excuse, or plot.
"His alibi sounded pretty thin to the detective."
verb
1
To make or become less dense, crowded, or concentrated.
"Gardeners thin out seedlings to give the strongest ones room to grow."

How to Use Thin

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishNot thick — used for physical width, body size, liquids, crowds, or weak arguments.

Common mistake

Don't confuse "thin" (lacking width/body fat, usually neutral or positive) with "skinny" (similar meaning but can sound more judgmental).

Common pairings
thin slice thin air wear thin thin ice

Word Forms

thinner comparative, more thin comparative, thinned past tense, thins plural, thins singular, thinnest superlative, most thin superlative

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Can you complete this real example?

She sliced the bread into _____, even pieces.

Etymology

From Old English þynne, an ancient Germanic word related to "stretch" — something stretched thin has little thickness.

Related Words

Rhymes for thin

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial