Thinner in a sentence as a noun

The profit margins are a lot thinner now than what they used to be.

The GS4 is slightly smaller, thinner, and lighter yet its screen is slightly larger.

So making a thinner, taller phone is not innovation?

So when someone makes something circa 20% thinner and lighter, yes, that is noteworthy.

That can counteract the higher resistance of a thinner wire, and so provide the same volume with, hopefully, better sound quality.

It has superficial appeal but I really wouldn't pay $100 for so many potential problems, especially as it would only make my wallet a few mm thinner.

The author is actually saying that the phone is lighter and thinner because of Apple's lack of "marketing cojones".It's just hilariously bad writing and control of the facts, all the way through.

Just seven lines of banal vitriol and claims--without justification--that the review "reads more like a lover on his last moments of love" and "making a thinner, taller phone is not innovation.

The model shows that the arms race is not only socially wasteful – a prisoner’s dilemma built directly into the market design – but moreover that its cost is ultimately borne by investors via wider spreads and thinner markets.

And this just illustrates the fact that the public's desire for manufacturers to strive for ever thinner and lighter devices means that we are getting ever more fragile devices.> "Just casually sticking a £700 smartphone in your pocket is an increasingly reckless thing to do."Wait, this guy really thinks that users should be expected to know that it's reckless to keep their _phone_ in their pocket, and that they weren't designed for this?That seems not right.

Thinner definitions

noun

a diluting agent

See also: dilutant diluent