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Definitions

thicket

[thik-it] / ˈθɪk ɪt /
NOUN
dense growth of small trees or bushes
Synonyms




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

A thicket of partnerships has sprung up in autonomous driving, with Uber also working with Waymo in US cities Austin and Atlanta, and with China's WeRide in Gulf locations such as Abu Dhabi.

From Barron's • Nov. 12, 2025

If you peer into the mind of a model, what you find won’t be recognizably human; it’s really a thicket of statistics, producing words by splitting language into long sequences of vectors.

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 9, 2025

Her delighted scrolling through a thicket of ads on a clickbait article on a tip Brad Pitt left someone is a little comic gem.

From Los Angeles Times • Sep. 3, 2025

England's chief medical officer for England Professor Chris Whitty has cautioned against creating a system that would risk terminally ill patients being "stuck in a bureaucratic thicket" in their final months of life.

From BBC • Jun. 20, 2025

The thicket reaches and pulls at Flo, trying to slow her progress.

From "Kwame Crashes the Underworld" by Craig Kofi Farmer