Definition of "thickset"
thickset
adjective
comparative more thickset, superlative most thickset
Having a relatively short, heavy build.
Quotations
[…] he directed me to a small chink in the board partition, through which I could see a thick set brawny fellow, with a fierce countenance,
1748, [Tobias Smollett], chapter 8, in The Adventures of Roderick Random. […], 2nd edition, volumes (please specify |volume=I or II), London: […] J. Osborn […], page 52
Ralph, who was a thickset clownish figure, arrived at his full strength, and conscious of the most complete personal superiority, laughed contemptuously at the threats of the slight-made stripling.
1820, [Walter Scott], chapter VII, in The Abbot. […], volume I, Edinburgh: […] [James Ballantyne & Co.] for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, […]; and for Archibald Constable and Company, and John Ballantyne, […], page 146
The contrast was as striking as it could have been eighteen years before, when Rigg was a most unengaging kickable boy, and Raffles was the rather thick-set Adonis of bar-rooms and back-parlors.
1871–1872, George Eliot [pseudonym; Mary Ann Evans], chapter 41, in Middlemarch […], volumes (please specify |volume=I to IV), Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, book IV
The glass door opened and there entered a thick-set, mud-bespattered, weather-beaten dock laborer with bare head and bare feet.
1952, Nikos Kazantzakis, chapter 1, in Carl Wildman, transl., Zorba the Greek, New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, translation of Βίος και πολιτεία του Αλέξη Ζορμπά [Víos kai politeía tou Aléxi Zormpá], page 3
Standing in her entrance, two men in white silk suits and butterfly-looking lace bow ties, black instrument cases by their side and black-brimmed white hats in their hands–my father, Nestor Castillo, thin and broad-shouldered, and Uncle Cesar, thickset and immense.
1989, Oscar Hijuelos, The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, page 4
Densely crowded together; made up of things that are densely crowded together; closely planted.
Quotations
His [the boar’s] Neck shoots up a thick-set thorny Wood;His bristled Back a Trench impal’d appears,And stands erected, like a Field of Spears.
1700, “Meleager and Atalanta, Out of the Eighth Book of Ovid’s Metamorphosis”, in John Dryden, transl., Fables Ancient and Modern, London: Jacob Tonson, page 106
noun
countable and uncountable, plural thicksets
(countable, obsolete) A thick hedge.
Quotations
Had Darrell been placed amidst the circumstances that make happy the homes of earnest men, Darrell would have been mirthful; had Waife been placed amongst the circumstances that concentrate talent, and hedge round life with trained thicksets and belting laurels, Waife would have been grave.
1858, Edward Bulwer-Lytton (as Pisistratus Caxton), What Will He Do with It? Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz, Volume 4, Book 11, Chapter 7, p. 294