|
DENSELY |
Thickly |
|
POPULOUS |
Thickly inhabited |
|
PLASTER |
Spread thickly |
|
SMEAR |
Rub over thickly |
|
|
AFRO |
Thickly curled hairdo |
|
BRISTLE |
Be thickly covered with stiff hair |
|
PILOSE |
Clothed thickly with pile or soft down. |
|
SETOUS |
Thickly set with bristles or bristly hairs. |
|
|
SEMINED |
Thickly covered or sown, as with seeds. |
|
VARIOLITIC |
Thickly marked with small, round specks; spotted. |
|
BUSH |
To branch thickly in the manner of a bush. |
|
BEPLASTER |
To plaster over; to cover or smear thickly; to
bedaub. |
|
THIN |
Not thickly or closely; in a seattered state; as, seed sown
thin. |
|
STUD |
To set with detached ornaments or prominent objects; to
set thickly, as with studs. |
|
ROAN |
Having a bay, chestnut, brown, or black color, with gray or
white thickly interspersed; -- said of a horse. |
|
SQUAB |
A thickly stuffed cushion; especially, one used for the seat
of a sofa, couch, or chair; also, a sofa. |
|
BESTUD |
To set or adorn, as with studs or bosses; to set
thickly; to stud; as, to bestud with stars. |
|
HAMMOCK |
A piece of land thickly wooded, and usually covered with
bushes and vines. Used also adjectively; as, hammock land. |
|
TILEFISH |
A large, edible, deep-water food fish (Lopholatilus
chamaeleonticeps) more or less thickly covered with large, round,
yellow spots. |
|
THINLY |
In a thin manner; in a loose, scattered manner; scantily;
not thickly; as, ground thinly planted with trees; a country thinly
inhabited. |
|
MAT |
Anything growing thickly, or closely interwoven, so as to
resemble a mat in form or texture; as, a mat of weeds; a mat of hair. |
|
THUJA |
A genus of evergreen trees, thickly branched, remarkable for
the distichous arrangement of their branches, and having scalelike,
closely imbricated, or compressed leaves. |
|
HEDGE |
To inclose or separate with a hedge; to fence with a
thickly set line or thicket of shrubs or small trees; as, to hedge a
field or garden. |
|
STREW |
To cover more or less thickly by scattering something
over or upon; to cover, or lie upon, by having been scattered; as, they
strewed the ground with leaves; leaves strewed the ground. |
|
VEERY |
...the
Northern United States and Canada. It is light tawny brown above. The
breast is pale buff, thickly spotted with brown. Called also Wilson's
... |