high
high 英 [haɪ] 美 [haɪ]
adj. 高的;
名词复数:highs 比较级:higher 最高级:highest
- Use the adjective high to describe something with a great elevation. If you want to see a really high mountain, you should visit Mount Everest.
- 请先登录
- adj. 高的;
-
1. What's the highest mountain in the US?
美国哪座山最高?
-
2. shoes with high heels
高跟鞋
-
3. a high branch/shelf/window
高处的树枝╱搁板╱窗
-
4. They were flying at high altitude.
他们正在高空飞行。
-
5. a high level of pollution
严重的污染
-
6. high-quality goods
优质商品
-
7. a high-fat diet
高脂肪的饮食
-
8. She has a high voice.
她嗓音很尖。
- high (adj.) Old English heh (Anglian), heah (West Saxon) "of great height, tall, conspicuously elevated; lofty, exalted, high-class," from Proto-Germanic *haukhaz (source also of Old Saxon hoh, Old Norse har, Danish høi, Swedish hög, Old Frisian hach, Dutch hoog, Old High German hoh, German hoch, Gothic hauhs "high;" also German Hügel "hill," Old Norse haugr "mound"). The group is of uncertain origin; perhaps related to Lithuanian kaukara "hill." Spelling with -gh represents a final guttural sound in the original word, lost since 14c.
- high (adv.) Old English heah; see high (adj.).
- high (n.1) early 14c., "high point, top," from high (adj.). As "area of high barometric pressure," from 1878. As "highest recorded temperature" from 1926. Meaning "state of euphoria" is from 1953.
- high (n.2) "thought, understanding," Old English hyge, cognate with Old Saxon hugi, Old High German hugi, Old Norse hygr, Swedish hög, Danish hu. Obsolete from 13c. in English and also lost in Modern German, but formerly an important Germanic word.
- 请先登录
0 个回复