
Open English Wordnet
Verbs
(v)thinlose thickness; become thin or thinner (v)thinmake thin or thinner“Thin the solution” Adjectives
(a)thinof relatively small extent from one surface to the opposite or in cross section“thin wire”,
“a thin chiffon blouse”,
“a thin book”,
“a thin layer of paint” (a)thin, leanlacking excess flesh“you can't be too rich or too thin”,
“Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look” (Shakespeare) (s)slender, thinvery narrow“a thin line across the page” (s)sparse, thinnot dense“a thin beard”,
“trees were sparse” (a)thinrelatively thin in consistency or low in density; not viscous“air is thin at high altitudes”,
“a thin soup”,
“skimmed milk is much thinner than whole milk”,
“thin oil” (a)thin(of sound) lacking resonance or volume“a thin feeble cry” (s)thinlacking spirit or sincere effort“a thin smile” (s)flimsy, fragile, slight, tenuous, thinlacking substance or significance“slight evidence”,
“a tenuous argument”,
“a thin plot”,
“a fragile claim to fame” Adverbs
(r)thinly, thinwithout viscosity“the blood was flowing thin”