extent or distance upward: The balloon stopped rising at a height of 500 feet.
distance upward from a given level to a fixed point: the height from the ground to the first floor; the height of an animal at the shoulder.
the distance between the lowest and highest points of a person standing upright; stature: She is five feet in height.
considerable or great altitude or elevation: the height of the mountains.
Often heights .
a high place above a level; a hill or mountain: They stood on the heights overlooking the valley.
the highest part; top; apex; summit: In his dreams he reached the heights.
the highest point; utmost degree: the height of power; the height of pleasure.
Archaic. high rank in social status.
Sometimes hight . Also Nonstandard, heighth[hahytth] /haɪtθ/ .
Origin of height
First recorded before 900; Middle English; Old English hīehtho. See high, -th1
SYNONYMS FOR height
3 tallness.
5 prominence.
6 peak, pinnacle; acme, zenith; culmination.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR height ON THESAURUS.COM
ANTONYMS FOR height
1, 2 depth.
SEE ANTONYMS FOR height ON THESAURUS.COM
synonym study for height
3. Height,altitude,elevation refer to distance above a level. Height denotes extent upward (as from foot to head) as well as any measurable distance above a given level: The tree grew to a height of ten feet. They looked down from a great height.Altitude usually refers to the distance, determined by instruments, above a given level, commonly mean sea level: altitude of an airplane.Elevation implies a distance to which something has been raised or uplifted above a level: a hill's elevation above the surrounding country, above sea level.
usage note for height
Height, and not heighth, is considered the standard English form for this word.
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH height
altitude, elevation, height (see synonym study at the current entry)
Words nearby height
Heiduc, heifer, Heifetz, heigh, heigh-ho, height, heighten, heightism, height of contour, height of land, height-to-paper
A surfer cares about wave heights, not the jostling of water molecules.
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The difference between the ice cube and the final tower height was zero every time.
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The plan would raise the height limit not just for the Sports Arena area but the entire Midway corridor down to Old Town.
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Falling ad prices on TV earlier this spring amid the height of the coronavirus crisis caught the attention of a number of direct-to-consumer brands, as previously reported by Digiday.
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The last time it reached such heights was January 2018, when a massive volatility shock sent the index into a correction.
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This is a Hollywood director at the height of his powers creating original, wildly ambitious epics.
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During the height of his disenchantment, he visited his hometown where an old friend gave him some liquid acid.
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At the height of the Soviet Union, the proletariat universally understood everything their government said was a work of fiction.
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Recipients in a cryobank can peruse donor files and see hair color, eye color, race, height, IQ, and so on.
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From the height of 700 feet, a lush uniform green obscured the destruction unfolding below him.
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The volume of the Rjukan fall is enormous, its height very considerable, and its roar deafening.
Ticket No. "9672"|Jules Verne
The tumulus was then raised to nearly twice its present height.
The Paladins of Edwin the Great|Clements R. Markham
The English minsters are long, narrow and low in contrast with the greater squareness and height of French contemporary churches.
The Brochure Series of Architectural Illustration, vol. 06, No. 12, December 1900|Various
I suppose it is a sort of nemesis of wit; the skidding of a wheel in the height of its speed.
George Bernard Shaw|Gilbert K. Chesterton
The taste was at its height about 1710, and continued for many years.
Little Books About Old Furniture. Volume II. The Period of Queen Anne|J. P. Blake
British Dictionary definitions for height
height
/ (haɪt) /
noun
the vertical distance from the bottom or lowest part of something to the top or apex
the vertical distance of an object or place above the ground or above sea level; altitude
relatively great altitude or distance from the bottom to the top
the topmost point; summit
astronomythe angular distance of a celestial body above the horizon
the period of greatest activity or intensitythe height of the battle
an extreme example of its kindthe height of rudeness
(often plural)an area of high ground
(often plural)the state of being far above the groundI don't like heights
(often plural)a position of influence, fame, or powerthe giddy heights they occupied in the 1980s
Word Origin for height
Old English hīehthu; related to Old Norse hǣthe, Gothic hauhitha, Old High German hōhida; see high