high
How to Use High
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishFar up, or far above the normal amount, level, or standard — used for height, price, status, sound pitch, and mood.
Don't confuse with "highly," an adverb used for degree ("highly regarded"), not physical height. "The bird flew high," not "flew highly."
Word Forms
higher comparative, higher comparative, highed past tense, Highs plural, highs singular, highest superlative, highest superlative
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
They built a _____ fence around the garden.
Etymology
From Old English hēah, going back through Proto-Germanic to a very old root meaning "to bend" — the same distant root that gave the name Caucasus (mountains that "bend upward").