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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a thick mood of" is not commonly used in written English, but it can be understood in context.
It can be used to describe an atmosphere or emotional state that is heavy or intense, often in a literary or poetic context.
Example: "As the storm approached, a thick mood of foreboding settled over the village, making everyone uneasy."
Alternatives: "a heavy atmosphere of" or "an intense feeling of".
Exact(2)
With the opening number — a jam session in a Fifty-second Street night spot — the director, Raoul Walsh, conjures a thick mood of creative melancholy and cuts it with bracingly acerbic street smarts.
Though he creates within the chip tune format, ESC doesn't consider himself a purist, and uses circuit-bent drum machines and analog synths alongside standard game consoles to set "a thick mood of impending doom".
Similar(58)
Andrew MacKay was in a relaxed mood on Wednesday afternoon when he dropped into David Cameron's suite of offices at Westminster to hand over a thick bundle of papers containing his parliamentary expenses.
He plaited a thick rope of suspense from strands that initially seem inconsequential, and the music found and underlined these longer threads, creating and holding and intensifying a mood across multiple scenes, keeping one aware of the bigger picture.
No sugar, a thick layer of foam.
A thick fog of gunsmoke hung everywhere.
Spread with a thick layer of cream.
So grab a thick book of fiction.
A thick cloud of smoke shot out.
A thick bunch of worm-eaten leaves.
Cut a thick slice of a lemon.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com