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City Bakery is renowned for its thick hot chocolate and house-mad marshmallows.
BBC: Romantic winters of New York
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We have very thick walls which insulate the house perfectly and on sunny days in winter we don't have to use the heating.
BBC: Climate change debate heating up
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And owning an unusual house requires a thick skin.
WSJ: Top Architects Go Local
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On Thursday, neighbor Tom Wrzosek told police he had heard a gunshot from the steep, thick terrain behind Jorden's house the morning before, about 90 minutes after Wisniewski was gunned down at the hospital.
MSN: Police: Breakup led Buffalo doctor to kill lover, self
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Sydney's summer sun has disappeared under a blanket of smoke so thick at times that iconic structures such as the Sydney Opera House and the harbour bridge could not be seen from the city centre, and flights have had to be diverted to other places.
ECONOMIST: Arson suspected
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Mr. Hionas, short and muscular with a thick Brooklyn accent, said the basement is his favorite room in the house, with poured concrete floors that give it a "Chelsea industrial" feel.
WSJ: Sol LeWitt Meets Bay Ridge
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Older houses also can also be renovated to meet passive-house standards, but such renovations are rare because of the extra-thick walls and high technological requirements that certified passive houses demand.
WSJ: German Project Aims to Save Energy
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Sometimes I had to walk around my house, waiting for a connection to reestablish itself. (Metal doors and thick walls can block a Bluetooth signal).
WSJ: Track Your Lost iPhone and Other Gear With These Gizmos
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Measuring in at just 7.9mm (0.3 inches) thick and weighing a mere 250g (0.55 lbs), the tablet still manages to house a 3, 100mAh battery, and a Snapdragon MSM8960 1.5GHz dual-core processor.
ENGADGET: NEC Medias Tab UL runs Android 4.0, weighs just over half a pound (hands-on)
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It was perched on the slope of a minor mountain, about a third of the way up, with thick slabs of rock stuck under the front side, a new rock every year, to keep the house from tumbling forward into the fields of wild raspberries.
NEWYORKER: Reverting to a Wild State