A WOMEN THAT IS PLUS SIZE, AND EVEN THOUGH SHES PLUS SIZE, CALLING HER A "THICK MADAME" IS SAYING SHE IS A FULL FIGURE & BEAUTIFUL WOMEN...sAYING YOU DONT HAVE TO BE A SIZE 0 OR 3 TO BE PRETTY....
Yes, it is. Usually the antonym of thin, it means comparatively or relatively heavy, dense, cohesive, or deep. (It may also be an adverb with similar meaning.) Examples: thick fog, thick soup, thick ice, thick accent, as thick as thieves.
madame is spelled mme when abbreviated in French.
There is an old French word 'cuilte' meaning 'mattress' from Latin 'culcita', the same meaning. The word became to mean 'thick outer bed covering' for no known reason
you spell mademe mesul m a d a m e m u s e l
mesdames.
I love you madame.
'In the thick of it' means in the middle (centre) of something, where all the action is, heavily involved. Look at him play! He's really in the thick of it. In the thick of live has similar meaning - your life is full, busy.
How thin or thick the liquid is.
Haze
Stubby means short and thick.
the busiest, most active part of a situation The soldier was wounded in the thick of the battle.
you dont know the ^$#)** meaning of thick?!?!?!??!!??!?!?!?!??!?!?!?!??!?!?!?!?!?!???!?!?!??!!!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!!?!?!?!??!?!
It's like Mr. and Mma is most closely "madame"
It's Madame Lestrange. Meaning, Bellatrix Lestrange. With a courtesy title in front, her name would be Mrs. Lestrange, or Madame Lestrange.
Something that is covered. By google eg The haze is like a thick blanket.
Mme is the abbreviated form of "madame", i.e. Mrs. Melle / Melles. ("mademoiselle/mesdemoiselles) is the translation of Miss/Misses Ms. has no French equivalent - French people tend to use Mme when the marital status is irrelevant to the purpose of the letter. In spoken French we use "madame" or "mademoiselle" depending of the context: an older person will be called "madame", whereas a younger one may be called "mademoiselle"
Pretty hot and thick and spoiled rotten!