0 made or done so that something is not thick:
1 with only a small number of people or things, or without the people or things being close to each other:
2 in a way that is not difficult to see through or to recognize:
3 in a way that is not difficult to see through or understand:
4 made or done so that something has a small distance from the top to the bottom side:
Thinly sliced cheese is good for sandwiches.
6 without enough money, people, supplies, etc. to operate, do a job, or provide what is needed:
The refineries were thinly staffed, and employees were overworked.
If budgets become more thinly stretched, service quality can only suffer.
Because the industry is thinly capitalized, it remains highly vulnerable to the next economic downturn.
The passage is an exposition of thinly based assumptions and deep-seated attitudes.
Second, the reactionary tone of the contributions is only thinly veiled (indeed at some points, not at all).
The flattened cells were thinly spread on the substrate.
The formation consists of fine-grained, thinly bedded, silty sandstones and siltstones which were deposited in a turbidite setting.
The candidate will spend most the campaign making speeches throughout the constituency, not infrequently at thinly attended meetings, and canvassing door to door where possible.
None has outlawed faculty participation in speaker's bureaus, or participation in consulting arrangements that are thinly veiled marketing efforts.
The policy implication would be that it is not necessarily wise to spread the plantations thinly.
The urban fabric is spread so thinly over so vast an area that the majority of streets have lost all potential to tease our senses.
中文繁体
薄, 薄薄地, 很少…
More中文简体
薄, 薄薄地, 很少…
MoreEspañol
en rebanadas finas, fino, escasamente…
MorePortuguês
finamente, em fatias finas, levemente…
MoreTürk dili
ince parçalar hâlinde, ince tabakalar biçiminde, küçük bir grup insanla/şeylerle…
MoreFrançais
finement, à peine, de façon clairsemée…
MoreČeština
řídce…
MoreDansk
tyndt…
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