thrang
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English thrang, throng (“dense, thick, tight, constrictive”), cognate with Old Norse þrǫngr (“narrow, close, tight”). Related to English thring (“to press”).
Adjective
thrang (comparative more thrang, superlative most thrang)
- (dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Busy, preoccupied.
- (dialectal, rare, Northern England) Crowded, busy.
- Synonym: throng
Verb
thrang (third-person singular simple present thrangs, present participle thranging, simple past and past participle thranged)
Etymology 2
From thring (“to press, squeeze”).
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