thin epoxy resin: key benefits for slip resistant concrete floors - Shield Insight Hub
Sperlu prepolymers enable high-performance epoxy resins with up to 80% bio-based content
thin, slender, slim, slight, tenuous mean not thick, broad, abundant, or dense. thin implies comparatively little extension between surfaces or in diameter, or it may imply lack of substance, richness, or abundance.
thin adjective (FEW) having only a small number of people or a small amount of something:
THIN definition: having relatively little extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thick. See examples of thin used in a sentence.
1. In a thin manner: Spread the varnish thin if you don't want it to wrinkle. 2. So as to be thin: Cut the cheese thin.
adv. in a thin manner. sparsely; not densely. so as to produce something thin: Slice the ham thin. v.t. to make thin or thinner (often fol. by down, out, etc.). v.i. to become thin or thinner; become reduced or diminished (often fol. by down, out, off, etc.): The crowd is thinning out.
thin (third-person singular simple present thins, present participle thinning, simple past and past participle thinned) (transitive) To make thin or thinner. quotations
Thin generally refers to something that has a small or narrow thickness or diameter in relation to its length or width. It can define an object, person, or substance with little thickness, or it could signify scarcity or insufficiency in terms of content, quality, or quantity.
thin: Relatively small in extent from one surface to the opposite, usually in the smallest solid dimension.
If you describe an argument or explanation as thin, you mean that it is weak and difficult to believe. However, the evidence is thin and, to some extent, ambiguous. Even if the optimists' theory is true, it still seems a thin argument against reform. Synonyms: unconvincing, inadequate, feeble, poor More Synonyms of thin