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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
high school
中學
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
School
,
n.
1.
A
place
for
learned
intercourse
and
instruction
;
an
institution
for
learning
;
an
educational
establishment
;
a
place
for
acquiring
knowledge
and
mental
training
;
as
,
the
school
of
the
prophets
.
Disputing
daily
in
the
school
of
one
Tyrannus
.
--
Acts
xix
. 9.
2.
A
place
of
primary
instruction
;
an
establishment
for
the
instruction
of
children
;
as
,
a
primary
school
;
a
common
school
;
a
grammar
school
.
As
he
sat
in
the
school
at
his
primer
.
--
Chaucer
.
3.
A
session
of
an
institution
of
instruction
.
How
now
,
Sir
Hugh
!
No
school
to-day?
--
Shak
.
4.
One
of
the
seminaries
for
teaching
logic
,
metaphysics
,
and
theology
,
which
were
formed
in
the
Middle
Ages
,
and
which
were
characterized
by
academical
disputations
and
subtilties
of
reasoning
.
At
Cambridge
the
philosophy
of
Descartes
was
still
dominant
in
the
schools
.
--
Macaulay
.
5.
The
room
or
hall
in
English
universities
where
the
examinations
for
degrees
and
honors
are
held
.
6.
An
assemblage
of
scholars
;
those
who
attend
upon
instruction
in
a
school
of
any
kind
;
a
body
of
pupils
.
What
is
the
great
community
of
Christians
,
but
one
of
the
innumerable
schools
in
the
vast
plan
which
God
has
instituted
for
the
education
of
various
intelligences?
--
Buckminster
.
7.
The
disciples
or
followers
of
a
teacher
;
those
who
hold
a
common
doctrine
,
or
accept
the
same
teachings
;
a
sect
or
denomination
in
philosophy
,
theology
,
science
,
medicine
,
politics
,
etc
.
Let
no
man
be
less
confident
in
his
faith
. . .
by
reason
of
any
difference
in
the
several
schools
of
Christians
.
--
Jer
.
Taylor
.
8.
The
canons
,
precepts
,
or
body
of
opinion
or
practice
,
sanctioned
by
the
authority
of
a
particular
class
or
age
;
as
,
he
was
a
gentleman
of
the
old
school
.
His
face
pale
but
striking
,
though
not
handsome
after
the
schools
.
--
A
.
S
.
Hardy
.
9.
Figuratively
,
any
means
of
knowledge
or
discipline
;
as
,
the
school
of
experience
.
Boarding school
,
Common school
,
District school
,
Normal school
,
etc
.
See
under
Boarding
,
Common
,
District
,
etc
.
High school
,
a
free
public
school
nearest
the
rank
of
a
college
. [
U
.
S
.]
School board
,
a
corporation
established
by
law
in
every
borough
or
parish
in
England
,
and
elected
by
the
burgesses
or
ratepayers
,
with
the
duty
of
providing
public
school
accommodation
for
all
children
in
their
district
.
School committee
,
School board
,
an
elected
committee
of
citizens
having
charge
and
care
of
the
public
schools
in
any
district
,
town
,
or
city
,
and
responsible
for
control
of
the
money
appropriated
for
school
purposes
. [
U
.
S
.]
School days
,
the
period
in
which
youth
are
sent
to
school
.
School district
,
a
division
of
a
town
or
city
for
establishing
and
conducting
schools
. [U.S.]
Sunday school
,
or
Sabbath school
,
a
school
held
on
Sunday
for
study
of
the
Bible
and
for
religious
instruction
;
the
pupils
,
or
the
teachers
and
pupils
,
of
such
a
school
,
collectively
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
High
a.
[
Compar.
Higher
superl.
Highest
.]
1.
Elevated
above
any
starting
point
of
measurement
,
as
a
line
,
or
surface
;
having
altitude
;
lifted
up
;
raised
or
extended
in
the
direction
of
the
zenith
;
lofty
;
tall
;
as
,
a
high
mountain
,
tower
,
tree
;
the
sun
is
high
.
2.
Regarded
as
raised
up
or
elevated
;
distinguished
;
remarkable
;
conspicuous
;
superior
; --
used
indefinitely
or
relatively
,
and
often
in
figurative
senses
,
which
are
understood
from
the
connection
;
as
--
(a)
Elevated
in
character
or
quality
,
whether
moral
or
intellectual
; preëminent;
honorable
;
as
,
high
aims
,
or
motives
.
“The
highest
faculty
of
the
soul.”
(b)
Exalted
in
social
standing
or
general
estimation
,
or
in
rank
,
reputation
,
office
,
and
the
like
;
dignified
;
as
,
she
was
welcomed
in
the
highest
circles
.
He
was
a
wight
of
high
renown
.
--
Shak
.
(c)
Of
noble
birth
;
illustrious
;
as
,
of
high
family
.
(d)
Of
great
strength
,
force
,
importance
,
and
the
like
;
strong
;
mighty
;
powerful
;
violent
;
sometimes
,
triumphant
;
victorious
;
majestic
,
etc
.;
as
,
a
high
wind
;
high
passions
.
“With
rather
a
high
manner.”
Strong
is
thy
hand
,
and
high
is
thy
right
hand
.
--
Ps
.
lxxxix
. 13.
Can
heavenly
minds
such
high
resentment
show?
--
Dryden
.
(e)
Very
abstract
;
difficult
to
comprehend
or
surmount
;
grand
;
noble
.
Both
meet
to
hear
and
answer
such
high
things
.
--
Shak
.
Plain
living
and
high
thinking
are
no
more
.
--
Wordsworth
.
(f)
Costly
;
dear
in
price
;
extravagant
;
as
,
to
hold
goods
at
a
high
price
.
If
they
must
be
good
at
so
high
a
rate
,
they
know
they
may
be
safe
at
a
cheaper
.
--
South
.
(g)
Arrogant
;
lofty
;
boastful
;
proud
;
ostentatious
; --
used
in
a
bad
sense
.
An
high
look
and
a
proud
heart
. . .
is
sin
.
--
Prov
.
xxi
. 4.
His
forces
,
after
all
the
high
discourses
,
amounted
really
but
to
eighteen
hundred
foot
.
--
Clarendon
.
3.
Possessing
a
characteristic
quality
in
a
supreme
or
superior
degree
;
as
,
high
(
i
.
e
.,
intense
)
heat
;
high
(
i
.
e
.
,
full
or
quite
)
noon
;
high
(
i
.
e
.
,
rich
or
spicy
)
seasoning
;
high
(
i
.
e
.
,
complete
)
pleasure
;
high
(
i
.
e
.
,
deep
or
vivid
)
color
;
high
(
i
.
e
.
,
extensive
,
thorough
)
scholarship
,
etc
.
High
time
it
is
this
war
now
ended
were
.
--
Spenser
.
High
sauces
and
spices
are
fetched
from
the
Indies
.
--
Baker
.
4.
Cookery
Strong-scented
;
slightly
tainted
;
as
,
epicures
do
not
cook
game
before
it
is
high
.
5.
Mus.
Acute
or
sharp
; --
opposed
to
grave
or
low
;
as
,
a
high
note
.
6.
Phon.
Made
with
a
high
position
of
some
part
of
the
tongue
in
relation
to
the
palate
,
as
ē (ē
ve
), ōō (fōōd).
See
Guide
to
Pronunciation
, §§ 10, 11.
High admiral
,
the
chief
admiral
.
High altar
,
the
principal
altar
in
a
church
.
High and dry
,
out
of
water
;
out
of
reach
of
the
current
or
tide
; --
said
of
a
vessel
,
aground
or
beached
.
High and mighty
arrogant
;
overbearing
. [
Colloq
.]
High art
,
art
which
deals
with
lofty
and
dignified
subjects
and
is
characterized
by
an
elevated
style
avoiding
all
meretricious
display
.
High bailiff
,
the
chief
bailiff
.
High Church
, ∧
Low Church
,
two
ecclesiastical
parties
in
the
Church
of
England
and
the
Protestant
Episcopal
Church
.
The
high-churchmen
emphasize
the
doctrine
of
the
apostolic
succession
,
and
hold
,
in
general
,
to
a
sacramental
presence
in
the
Eucharist
,
to
baptismal
regeneration
,
and
to
the
sole
validity
of
Episcopal
ordination
.
They
attach
much
importance
to
ceremonies
and
symbols
in
worship
.
Low-churchmen
lay
less
stress
on
these
points
,
and
,
in
many
instances
,
reject
altogether
the
peculiar
tenets
of
the
high-church
school
.
See
Broad Church
.
High constable
Law
,
a
chief
of
constabulary
.
See
Constable
,
n.
, 2.
High commission court
,
a
court
of
ecclesiastical
jurisdiction
in
England
erected
and
united
to
the
regal
power
by
Queen
Elizabeth
in
1559.
On
account
of
the
abuse
of
its
powers
it
was
abolished
in
1641.
High day
Script.
,
a
holy
or
feast
day
. --
John
xix
. 31.
High festival
Eccl.
,
a
festival
to
be
observed
with
full
ceremonial
.
High German
,
or
High Dutch
.
See
under
German
.
High jinks
,
an
old
Scottish
pastime
;
hence
,
noisy
revelry
;
wild
sport
. [
Colloq
.]
“All
the
high
jinks
of
the
county
,
when
the
lad
comes
of
age.”
--
F
.
Harrison
.
High latitude
Geog.
,
one
designated
by
the
higher
figures
;
consequently
,
a
latitude
remote
from
the
equator
.
High life
,
life
among
the
aristocracy
or
the
rich
.
High liver
,
one
who
indulges
in
a
rich
diet
.
High living
,
a
feeding
upon
rich
,
pampering
food
.
High Mass
.
R.
C
. Ch.
See
under
Mass
.
High milling
,
a
process
of
making
flour
from
grain
by
several
successive
grindings
and
intermediate
sorting
,
instead
of
by
a
single
grinding
.
High noon
,
the
time
when
the
sun
is
in
the
meridian
.
High place
Script.
,
an
eminence
or
mound
on
which
sacrifices
were
offered
.
High priest
.
See
in
the
Vocabulary
.
High relief
.
Fine Arts
See
Alto-rilievo
.
High school
.
See
under
School
.
High seas
Law
,
the
open
sea
;
the
part
of
the
ocean
not
in
the
territorial
waters
of
any
particular
sovereignty
,
usually
distant
three
miles
or
more
from
the
coast
line
. --
Wharton
.
High steam
,
steam
having
a
high
pressure
.
High steward
,
the
chief
steward
.
High tea
,
tea
with
meats
and
extra
relishes
.
High tide
,
the
greatest
flow
of
the
tide
;
high
water
.
High time
.
(a)
Quite
time
;
full
time
for
the
occasion
.
(b)
A
time
of
great
excitement
or
enjoyment
;
a
carousal
. [
Slang
]
High treason
,
treason
against
the
sovereign
or
the
state
,
the
highest
civil
offense
.
See
Treason
.
Note:
☞
It
is
now
sufficient
to
speak
of
high
treason
as
treason
simply
,
seeing
that
petty
treason
,
as
a
distinct
offense
,
has
been
abolished
.
--
High water
,
the
utmost
flow
or
greatest
elevation
of
the
tide
;
also
,
the
time
of
such
elevation
.
High-water mark
.
(a)
That
line
of
the
seashore
to
which
the
waters
ordinarily
reach
at
high
water
.
(b)
A
mark
showing
the
highest
level
reached
by
water
in
a
river
or
other
body
of
fresh
water
,
as
in
time
of
freshet
.
High-water shrub
Bot.
,
a
composite
shrub
(
Iva frutescens
),
growing
in
salt
marshes
along
the
Atlantic
coast
of
the
United
States
.
High wine
,
distilled
spirits
containing
a
high
percentage
of
alcohol
; --
usually
in
the
plural
.
To be on a high horse
,
to
be
on
one's
dignity
;
to
bear
one's
self
loftily
. [
Colloq
.]
With a high hand
.
(a)
With
power
;
in
force
;
triumphantly
.
“The
children
of
Israel
went
out
with
a
high
hand
.”
--
Ex
.
xiv
. 8.
(b)
In
an
overbearing
manner
,
arbitrarily
.
“They
governed
the
city
with
a
high
hand
.”
--
Jowett
(
Thucyd
. ).
Syn:
--
Tall
;
lofty
;
elevated
;
noble
;
exalted
;
supercilious
;
proud
;
violent
;
full
;
dear
.
See
Tall
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
high
school
n
:
a
public
secondary
school
usually
including
grades
9
through
12; "
he
goes
to
the
neighborhood
highschool
" [
syn
: {
senior
high school
,
senior high
,
high
,
highschool
]
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