Associations to the word «Dense»
Noun
- Gravity
- Buttress
- Burrow
- Crevice
- Cool
- Grass
- Axon
- Stem
- Matrice
- Slope
- Flower
- Spacing
- Tundra
- Obscurity
- Tissue
- Growth
- Magnolia
- Condensation
- Helium
- Expanse
- Stratum
- Seedling
- Singularity
- Solid
- Dark
- Wetland
- Hillside
- Oak
- Bog
- Meadow
- Core
- Plumage
- Membrane
- Weed
- Topology
- Forming
- Cypress
- Swirl
- Sunlight
- Plume
- Crowd
- Hollow
- Gully
- Narrow
- Concealment
- Weave
- Coat
- Rainfall
- Coating
- Redwood
- Sod
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
DENSE, adjective. Having relatively high density.
DENSE, adjective. Compact; crowded together.
DENSE, adjective. Thick; difficult to penetrate.
DENSE, adjective. Opaque; allowing little light to pass through.
DENSE, adjective. Obscure, or difficult to understand.
DENSE, adjective. (mathematics) (topology) Being a subset of a topological space that approximates the space well. See Wikipedia article on dense sets for mathematical definition.
DENSE, adjective. Of a person, slow to comprehend; of low intelligence.
DENSE BLAZINGSTAR, noun. A plant of the species Liatris spicata, native to warmer temperate eastern North America.
Dictionary definition
DENSE, adjective. Permitting little if any light to pass through because of denseness of matter; "dense smoke"; "heavy fog"; "impenetrable gloom".
DENSE, adjective. Hard to pass through because of dense growth; "dense vegetation"; "thick woods".
DENSE, adjective. Having high relative density or specific gravity; "dense as lead".
DENSE, adjective. Slow to learn or understand; lacking intellectual acuity; "so dense he never understands anything I say to him"; "never met anyone quite so dim"; "although dull at classical learning, at mathematics he was uncommonly quick"- Thackeray; "dumb officials make some really dumb decisions"; "he was either normally stupid or being deliberately obtuse"; "worked with the slow students".
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.