PRON
You use
this
when you refer to a general situation, activity, or event which is happening or has just happened and which you feel involved in. □
I thought, this is why I've travelled thousands of miles.
□
Tim, this is awful. I know what you must think, but it's not so.
7
DET
You use
this
when you refer to the place you are in now or to the present time. □
We've stopped transporting weapons to this country by train.
□
I think coffee is probably the best thing at this point.
● PRON
This
is also a pronoun. □
This is the worst place I've come across.
8
DET
You use
this
to refer to the next occurrence in the future of a particular day, month, season, or festival. □
We're getting married this June.
9
ADV
[ADV
adj] You use
this
when you are indicating the size or shape of something with your hands. □
They'd said the wound was only about this big you see and he showed me with his fingers.
10
ADV
[ADV
adv] You use
this
when you are going to specify how much you know or how much you can tell someone. □
I am not going to reveal my plan, but I will tell you this much: if it works out, the next few years will be very interesting.
11
CONVENTION
If you say
this is it
, you are agreeing with what someone else has just said. [FORMULAE
] □
'You know, people conveniently forget the things they say.'—'Well this is it.'
12
PRON
You use
this
in order to say who you are or what organization you are representing, when you are speaking on the phone, radio, or television. □
Hello, this is John Thompson.
13
DET
You use
this
to refer to the medium of communication that you are using at the time of speaking or writing. □
What I'm going to do in this lecture is focus on something very specific.
14
→ see also
these
15
PHRASE
If you say that you are doing or talking about
this and that
, or
this, that, and the other
you mean that you are doing or talking about a variety of things that you do not want to specify. □
'And what are you doing now?'—'Oh this and that.'
this|tle
/θ
I
s
ə
l/ (thistles
) N‑COUNT
A
thistle
is a wild plant which has leaves with sharp points and purple flowers.
thith|er
/ð
I
ðə
r
/
1
ADV
[ADV
after v]
Thither
means to the place that has already been mentioned. [OLD-FASHIONED
] □
They have dragged themselves thither for shelter.
2
hither and thither
→ see
hither
tho'
also
thoTho'
and
tho
are very informal written forms of
though
.
thong
/θɒ
ŋ, [AM
] θɔː
ŋ/ (thongs
)
1
N‑COUNT
A
thong
is a long thin strip of leather, plastic, or rubber.
2
N‑COUNT
A
thong
is a narrow band of cloth that is worn between a person's legs to cover up his or her sexual organs, and that is held up by a piece of string around the waist.
3
N‑COUNT
[usu pl]
Thongs
are open shoes which are held on your foot by a V-shaped strap that goes between your big toe and the toe next to it. [mainly AM
]
in BRIT, usually use flip-flops
tho|rac|ic
/θɔːræ
s
I
k/ ADJ
[ADJ
n]
Thoracic
means relating to or affecting your thorax. [MEDICAL
] □
…diseases of the thoracic area.
thor|ax
/θɔː
ræks/ (thoraxes
or thoraces
/θɔː
rəsiːz/)
1
N‑COUNT
[usu sing] Your
thorax
is the part of your body between your neck and your waist. [MEDICAL
]
2
N‑COUNT
[usu sing] An insect's
thorax
is the central part of its body to which the legs and wings are attached. [TECHNICAL
]
thorn
/θɔː
r
n/ (thorns
)
1
N‑COUNT
Thorns
are the sharp points on some plants and trees, for example on a rose bush.
2
N‑VAR
A
thorn
or a
thorn bush
or a
thorn tree
is a bush or tree which has a lot of thorns on it. □
…the shade of a thorn bush.
3
PHRASE
If you describe someone or something as a
thorn in
your
side
or
a thorn in
your
flesh
, you mean that they are a continuous problem to you or annoy you. □
The Party was a thorn in the flesh of his coalition.