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单词 higher
释义

highern.2

Interpretation of heyere, heyer in quots. c14751, c14752 at eyrer n. as meaning ‘one who raises or exalts’ in N.E.D. (1898): see note at eyrer n.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2014; most recently modified version published online December 2019).

higheradj.adv.n.1

Brit. /ˈhʌɪə/, U.S. /ˈhaɪər/
Forms:

α. early Old English hear (as adverb), early Old English hira, early Old English hirra, Old English heaor (as adverb), Old English heara, Old English hearra, Old English hera, Old English herra, Old English hiera, Old English hierra, Old English hyra, Old English hyrra, late Old English æara (perhaps transmission error), late Old English heora (perhaps transmission error), Middle English hear, Middle English her (in a late copy), Middle English here, Middle English herr, Middle English herre, Middle English (1700s English regional (Cumberland)) heer, late Middle English har, 1500s harre; Scottish pre-1700 heair, pre-1700 hear, pre-1700 heare; N.E.D. (1898) also records a form late Middle English harre. eOE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Tanner) iii. vi. 174 Heo wolden þone stan..hear [OE Corpus Oxf. heaor; L. altius] & gerisenlicor in þære ilcan stowe gesettan.OE Phoenix 28 Is þæt torhte lond twelfum herra, folde fæðmrimes..þonne ænig þara beorga þe her beorhte mid us hea hlifiað.OE Daniel 490 Wearð him hyrra hyge and on heortan geðanc maran [read mara on] modsefan þonne gemet wære.?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 136 For se þehul is herre. se þewint is mare þron.c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) l. 1637 Þe nihtegale ihrde þis. An hupte uppon on bloþe ris. An herre sat þan heo dude ear.c1300 Childhood Jesus (Laud) l. 526 in C. Horstmann Altengl. Legenden (1875) 1st Ser. 19 Þane ore Maister he can more, And herre wexeth nouþe in lore.c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 333 Herre þen ani in þe hous by þe hede & more.a1450 ( tr. Vegetius De Re Militari (Douce) f. 70 Ȝif he finde him-self and his companye on þe herre side.1467 in Rec. Parl. Scotl. to 1707 (2007) 1467/10/9 To set it [sc. the crown groat] heare or laware as salbe thocht spedefull.c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 61 Hoger of hert & of her wille.1570 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. xii. 128 Be Hanniballis, and heis ȝour hartis sum hear.1589 R. Robinson Golden Mirrour sig. G.2 How can Dame Fortune mount more harre?1595 Edinb. Test. XXVII. f. 361v, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at He(e. Ony hear dewtie nor thai payit of befoir.a1789 I. Ritson Borrowdale Let. 8 in Tim Bobbin (1793) I wondert at she duddnt grow heer, leevin in a hoos twenty or thirty fuit hee.

β. Old English heagra, Old English heagur (as adverb), Old English heahra, Old English hegra, Old English hegur (as adverb), Old English hehra, Old English hyhra, late Old English hehgra, early Middle English hæhere, early Middle English hæhȝere, early Middle English haȝere, early Middle English hahȝere, early Middle English haiȝere, early Middle English heahere, early Middle English hegere, early Middle English hehere, early Middle English hehȝere, early Middle English hehhre ( Ormulum), early Middle English hehre ( Ormulum), Middle English heȝare, Middle English heȝer, Middle English heȝere, Middle English heȝger, Middle English hegher, Middle English heȝher, Middle English heghur, Middle English hegther, Middle English heiar, Middle English heier, Middle English heiere, Middle English heiȝer, Middle English heiȝere, Middle English heighere, Middle English heyar, Middle English heyare, Middle English heyer, Middle English heyere, Middle English heyger, Middle English heyȝer, Middle English heyȝere, Middle English heygher, Middle English heyȝher, Middle English heyghere, Middle English heyher, Middle English heyhere, Middle English heyr, Middle English heyre, Middle English 1600s (1800s English regional (northern)) heigher, 1800s heegher (English regional (Lancashire)); Scottish pre-1700 hechar, pre-1700 hecher, pre-1700 heeghar, pre-1700 heichar, pre-1700 heigher, pre-1700 heyar, pre-1700 heyare, pre-1700 heyer, pre-1700 heyere, pre-1700 heygher, pre-1700 1800s– heicher. OE Genesis B 274 He him strenglicran stol geworhte, heahran [altered from hearoran] on heofonum.OE Wærferð tr. Gregory Dialogues (Hatton) (1900) ii. xxxv. 173 On þam leohte þære incundan gesihðe þæs modes bosum byð tolæten..& aþened to þam swiðe, þæt hit byð hyhra ofer middaneard.OE tr. Defensor Liber Scintillarum (1969) xvii. 166 Omnis superbia..tantoque profundius labitur, quanto excelsius eleuatur : ælc ofermodignyss..& swa micelum swa he deoppur byð asliden swa micelum swa he hegur byþ upp ahafen.OE Homily: Sunnandæges Spell (Tiber. A.iii) in A. S. Napier Wulfstan (1883) 217 Þæt wæter wæs hegre beufan eorþan, þonne se munt, þe is syxtinan fædman hegre.c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 6297 All anoþerr lif. & hehhre lif. & bettre.a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 115 Ðat is riht ðat godes milce bie aure heier and more ðanne his rihte dom.a1225 (?OE) MS Vesp. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 243 We scule bien..imeaded mid heahere mede.c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 3859 Mid hæhȝere stefne.a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Job xxxv. 5 Behold heuene, and loke, and myndefulli see [L. contemplare] the cloudis, that is heȝere than thou.a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 7331 Saul..was hegher [Fairf. heyer, Trin. Cambr. heȝer] þan ani man.?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) i. pr. i. l. 41 When sche hef hir heued heyer sche perced[e] þe selue heuene. ▸ ?1440 tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) vii. l. 108 The bowes of that tre That heier beth, let hewe of or diuyde Away.c1475 (?c1425) Avowing of King Arthur (1984) l. 49 He is heȝer þenne a horse, That vncumly corse.?1507 W. Dunbar Tua Mariit Wemen (Rouen) in Poems (1998) I. 45 With that sprang vp hir spreit be a span hechar.1609 in W. Cramond Rec. Elgin (1903) I. 232 The..derth of bootis and shoone..daylie ryseis to heicher priceis.1627 in A. Peterkin Rentals Earldom & Bishoprick of Orkney (1820) iii. 94 According to the rentell, quhilk to our knawledge can not be valued nor munted heigher nor it is alreddie.1848 ‘T. Treddlehoyle’ Bairnsla Foaks' Ann. 46 Little undersized munkeys, not much heigher than tups at thay knock boolders daan we i't street.1887 J. Service Life Dr. Duguid 89 I thanked him kindly, and went out from his presence a handbreid heicher in my own estimation.1916 G. Abel Wylins 115 It's only a heicher showd, my freen.1975 A. Deyell My Shetland 53 Da auld-fashioned sink an tub got piled heigher an heigher wi weet claes.1995 A. Fenton Craiters i. 45 In places e snaa wis heicher'n e sides o e car.

γ. Middle English hiar, Middle English hiegher, Middle English hiȝer, Middle English hiȝere, Middle English hiȝore, Middle English hyere, Middle English hyger, Middle English hyȝer, Middle English hyȝere, Middle English hyher, Middle English hyhere, Middle English hyur, Middle English iure, Middle English 1600s hire, Middle English–1500s hiere, Middle English–1500s hyer, Middle English–1500s hygher, Middle English–1600s hier, late Middle English– higher, 1500s higar, 1600s higer, 1800s– 'igher (regional and nonstandard); Scottish pre-1700 hiar, pre-1700 hicher, pre-1700 hiear, pre-1700 hieare, pre-1700 hier, pre-1700 hyar, pre-1700 hyare, pre-1700 hyear, pre-1700 hyeare, pre-1700 hyer, pre-1700 hyere, pre-1700 hygher, pre-1700 1700s– higher. c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Rom. xiii. 1 Euery soule, or lyuynge man, be suget to hiȝer poweris.a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. viii. xi. 479 Þe hyer cercles þey hauen, in þe lenger tyme þey fullen[deþ] [MS fulfilliden] her cours.?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 61 Mount Syon..is a lytill hiere þan the oþer syde of the cytee.a1500 ( Vision E. Leversedge in Notes & Queries Somerset & Dorset (1905) 9 31 This mantel was lengar and the colour higher.1508 W. Kennedy Flyting (Chepman & Myllar) in Poems W. Dunbar (1998) I. 211 On Arthuris Sete or on ane hyar hyll.a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 37/1 His left shoulder much higher then his right.1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry ii. f. 52 You must make the spaces betwixt hyer.1601 R. Johnson tr. G. Botero Worlde 32 Of no higher times, then when they first began.a1665 K. Digby Jrnl. Voy. to Mediterranean (1868) 80 They..fill with fresh water; but I belieue it dreaneth thither from the higher land.1762 A. Dickson Treat. Agric. i. xix. 122 Exposed to overflowings from higher ground.1814 T. Chalmers Evid. Christian Revel. vii. 195 Geology gives a higher antiquity to the world.1876 P. G. Tait Lect. Recent Adv. in Physical Sci. (ed. 2) i. 20 The energy of the universe is continually passing from higher to lower forms.1928 Techn. Bull. (U.S. Dept. Agric.) No. 52. 4 An attempt is made..to establish, principally on the foundation of comparative morphology, a basis for the recognition of genera and higher groups as well as of species.1943 Econ. Jrnl. 53 377 As a result of the higher price of potatoes, all potato spirits are increased by 30%.2012 N.Y. Times Mag. 22 July 11/2 According to a new study, people with easier-to-pronounce surnames occupy higher positions in law firms.

δ. late Middle English herere, late Middle English herrer, late Middle English herrere, late Middle English herrore. a1450 (c1410) H. Lovelich Hist. Holy Grail xxx. l. 122 Not fully the Ende of þe lignage, but..of Anothir knyhtes of herere parage.a1500 ( tr. Vegetius De Re Militari (Cambr. Add. 8706) in Middle Eng. Dict. at Heigh Herrer [a1450 Douce Ȝif he finde him-self and his companye on þe herre side].

ε. 1800s– hicker (English regional (Yorkshire)). 1876 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Words Whitby Hicker, higher..‘I want t'hicker yan o' them’, the top one of the lot.

Origin: A word inherited from Germanic.
Etymology: < the Germanic base of high adj. + the Germanic base of -er suffix3; compare Old Frisian hār, Old High German hōhor, Old Icelandic hæri (also hærri), and (as comparative adverb) Old Dutch hōiro, Old Saxon hōhor.By regular phonological development the inherited forms of the comparative would originally have shown i-mutation caused by the suffix (compare discussion at -er suffix3), loss (or assimilation) of the stem-final fricative, and contraction of the suffix; see α. forms. However, already in Old English the α. forms are subject to the influence of the positive form hēah high adj. in various degrees. The β. and γ. forms are essentially re-formations from high adj. The δ. forms reflect a late Middle English double comparative formation. In early use as noun in the context of social superiority (see sense C. 1) sometimes difficult to distinguish from her n.1
Where important for the history of a particular use of high adj. or high adv., quotations for higher are included at those entries.
A. adj. The comparative of high adj.
I. In senses corresponding to high adj. I.
1. Situated at a greater elevation, further up, at a greater physical height; measuring a greater distance from top to bottom, having greater physical height, taller.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > high position > [adjective] > in higher position
overeOE
ovewardeOE
higherOE
overmorec1350
overhighera1382
overerc1400
upper1467
superior1632
overriding1883
the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > vertical extent > [adjective] > higher
higherOE
society > society and the community > social class > nobility > rank > [adjective] > exalted in rank > of higher, loftier, or more exalted rank
higherOE
OE Phoenix 28 Is þæt torhte lond twelfum herra, folde fæðmrimes..þonne ænig þara beorga þe her beorhte mid us hea hlifiað.
OE Homily: Sunnandæges Spell (Tiber. A.iii) in A. S. Napier Wulfstan (1883) 217 Þæt wæter wæs hegre beufan eorþan, þonne se munt, þe is syxtinan fædman hegre.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Job xxxv. 5 Behold heuene, and loke, and myndefulli see [L. contemplare] the cloudis, that is heȝere than thou.
c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 333 (MED) Herre þen ani in þe hous by þe hede & more.
a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Deut. xxiv. 6 Thou schalt not take in the stide of wed the lowere and the hiȝere queerne stoon [a1425 E.V. grynstoon; L. molam] of thi brothir.
?a1425 (c1400) Mandeville's Trav. (Titus C.xvi) (1919) 61 Mount Syon..is a lytill hiere þan the oþer syde of the cytee.
a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 37/1 His left shoulder much higher then his right.
a1665 K. Digby Jrnl. Voy. to Mediterranean (1868) 80 They..fill with fresh water; but I belieue it dreaneth thither from the higher land.
1762 A. Dickson Treat. Agric. i. xix. 122 Exposed to overflowings from higher ground.
1872 C. D. Warner Saunterings 60 I could not learn that he ever went up any thing higher than the top of a diligence.
1952 G. H. Dury Map Interpr. x. 89 The sizable but very low-lying dry patches, only slightly higher than the rest of the Levels.
1978 L. Kramer Faggots 189 In a sequined Elizabethan turban three inches higher than any he'd floated before.
2011 New Scientist 16 July 23 Tucson, which is located on ground 460 metres higher than Phoenix.
2. Frequently with capital initial. In geographical names: designating that part of a country, region, etc., situated on more elevated land or away from the sea; spec. designating the part of a river further from its mouth than to its source. Usually opposed to lower. Cf. high adj. 2c.Upper is now the more commonly used term; cf. upper adj. 1.
ΚΠ
a1450 Generides (Pierpont Morgan) (1865) l. 5083 (MED) But than cam encountre strong, Folk of higher Inde among.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Tobias viii. D So the angell Raphael toke holde of the deuell, and sent him awaye, and bounde him in the wyldernes of the hyer Egipte.
1575 J. Turler Traueiler iv. 43 I speake heere of the higher Germanie, for the Dutche weemen are more ciuile.
1632 W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. vii. 334 Shoaring along for foure hundred miles, the higher and lower Calabrian Coast,..we landed at Naples.
1669 J. Webb Hist. Ess. Lang. China 56 This Province of Xensi..is so famous, that for grandeur and Antiquity, it may by just right dispute with all the Provinces of the Higher Asia.
1700 J. Brome Trav. iii. 144 We made all the haste..to Boston, which lying within the Precincts of Higher Holland, we hoped to find more safe and inoffensive.
1740 tr. F. Juvenel de Carlencas Hist. Belles Lettres 2 The Higher Syria nevertheless, where they [sc. Christians] made use of the Syriack Language in their Offices, may be excepted.
1817 R. T. Wilson Sketch Mil. & Polit. Power Russia 141 Austria was not willing that she [sc. Russia] should..throw her frontier upon Illyria and the higher Danube.
1840 Foreign Missionary Chron. Sept. 258/1 New sacred colonies issued out in..widening circles, until not only Egypt, but the banks of the higher Nile, and the green islands of the sandy desert, had their temples,..their arts and their institutions.
1909 Bull. Amer. Geogr. Soc. 41 649 It seems to have escaped our author's notice that the cocoanut derives not from the snows of higher India but from the alluvium of the Nile valley.
2005 A. Umbreit Spitsbergen (Bradt Trav. Guides) (ed. 3) i. 24 Thunderstorms are practically unknown in the higher Arctic—in my 19 years in Spitsbergen, I have experienced not a single one.
II. In senses corresponding to high adj. II.
3. Designating a person or thing of more exalted status than another (or others) of the same kind; of relatively high status, quality, or importance; held in relatively high esteem; finer, greater, superior; more noble or refined. Opposed to lower.Frequently with reference to social class (see also the higher orders at order n. 7a, higher class n.).In quot. 1340 with superlative force; = highest adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > nobility > rank > [adjective] > superior in rank
highereOE
furtherc1000
superior1483
superordinate1615
precedential1836
upscale1966
eOE King Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care (Hatton) (1871) Pref. 6 Lære mon siððan furður on Lædengeðiode ða ðe mon furðor læran wille & to hieran hade don wille.
OE Laws of Æðelred II (Claud.) vi. lii. 258 Swa man bið mihtigra her nu for worulde oþþon þurh geþingða hearra on hade, swa sceal he deoppor synna gebetan.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 11201 Ich wulle habben þire hæhre monne children.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 122 Al alsuo ase in heuene heþ þri stages of uolke..huer-of þe on is heȝere, þe oþer men, þe þridde loȝest.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Rom. xiii. 1 Euery soule, or lyuynge man, be suget to hiȝer poweris.
c1390 W. Hilton Expos. Qui habitat & Bonum Est (1954) 20 (MED) Eueri mon..coueyteþ for-to semen hiȝore þen oþer.
a1450 (c1410) H. Lovelich Hist. Holy Grail xxx. l. 122 (MED) Not fully the Ende of þe lignage, but..of Anothir knyhtes of herere parage.
a1500 (c1380) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 479 (MED) He mut nedis ordeyne prestis, summe hyere & summe lowere.
?1566–7 G. Buchanan Opinion Reformation Univ. St. Andros in Vernacular Writings (1892) 15 Doctor..in the hyear faculteis.
1590 J. Smythe Certain Disc. Weapons Proëme 16 All higher and lower Officers of Armies under the Generall.
1624 A. Darcie tr. Originall of Idolatries xii. 54 Which Mytrall Ornament is only preserued for eminent and higher Priests.
1625 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) 113 Their Second Nobles..are a Counterpoize to the Higher Nobility, that they grow not too Potent.
1702 W. Penn More Fruits of Solitude §262. 95 Those Higher Ranks of Men are but the Trustees of Heaven for the Benefit of lesser Mortals, who, as Minors, are intituled to all their Care and Provision.
1789 T. Jefferson Let. 19 May in R. Price Corr. (1994) III. 224 The noblesse..would be induced to unite themselves into one house, with the higher clergy, the lower clergy and tiers forming another.
1865 J. G. Holland Plain Talks v. 188 A set of men..actuated by no higher motive than a love of plunder and of place.
1899 Westm. Gaz. 9 June 2/1 He makes evident the disgust of his own higher nature for the past excesses of his basilar passions.
1933 Relief for Unemployed Transients (U.S. Senate Comm. on Manuf.) 103 The men in the bonus expeditionary forces and their families camping in Pennsylvania are of a higher type than the average economic migrant.
1940 R. E. Garst Headlines & Deadlines 206 Sacred cow,..a subject or story in which the publisher or higher editors are interested and which must be printed.
2014 MailOnline (Nexis) 19 Apr. Calling your evening meal ‘tea’ is..a working-class indicator: the higher echelons call this meal dinner or supper.
4. With nouns denoting a subject of study, indicating a more advanced level or approach, as higher algebra, higher geometry, higher mathematics, etc.Use with the definite article (as the higher mathematics) was formerly more usual than it is now.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > quality of being better or superior > [adjective] > surpassing the ordinary
surpassingc1580
supraordinarya1623
superordinary1630
extraordinary1649
higher1718
above par1776
extra1850
premium1856
plus1921
double dip1963
1718 I. Newton Let. in Corr. (1977) VII. 18 He..kept a correspondence with Mr Oldenburg about Arithmetical questions..& hither he knew nothing of the higher Geometry.
1767 Crit. Rev. Nov. 374 By the application of algebra and the higher calculus, the principal properties of spherical triangles are investigated in a very curious and concise manner.
1778 E. Apthorp Lett. Prevalence Christianity 29 A clearer and a shorter course of mathematics and the higher physics.
1807 T. Young Course Lect. Nat. Philos. II. 557/2 It is absolutely necessary for the purposes of the higher geometry to extend..the foundations which the ancients laid in their postulates.
1838 A. De Morgan Ess. Probabilities 68 The approximative methods of the higher mathematics.
1894 Pop. Sci. Monthly Nov. 56 The present sequence begins with algebra and runs through geometry, plane trigonometry, and higher algebra to analytics.
1904 G. Burgess & W. Irwin Picaroons vi. 135 You can mark a ‘high-low’ system that is pretty sure to win, but it's too difficult for me—I was never much of a Dazmaraz at the higher mathematics.
1944 Life 27 Mar. 105/2 A lightning calculator that does problems in the higher calculus faster than twenty mathematicians.
1959 Canad. Math. Bull. 2 137 Few of the texts on higher algebra will confront the reader with numerical details, computing schemes, and example work.
2002 Isis 93 457/1 The importance of a lesser-known branch of higher mathematics for Einstein's unified approach to gravitation and inertia.
2010 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 19 Aug. 53/4 When a vice-president visits the CIA eight times to express his views..he's not struggling with the higher geometry of intelligence analysis but turning up the heat in the kitchen.
5. Of an organism or group of organisms: exhibiting a relatively complex organization or structure; more advanced in evolutionary development.higher plant: see Compounds 1b.
ΚΠ
1797 Encycl. Brit. XI. 574 (note) If a worm be found to have two seats of sensation analogous to the brain in higher animals.
1811 D. Ellis Farther Inq. Changes Atmospheric Air v. 365 This chemical union, especially in the higher animals, is increased and promoted by the great extent of surface of the respiratory organ.
1876 Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 18 75 Embryogeny, therefore, contrary to what has hitherto been supposed from the complexity of the larval forms, leads to an approximation to the lower Vermes and the Turbellaria, rather than to the higher Vermes and the Annelida.
1896 J. W. Kirkaldy & E. C. Pollard tr. J. E. V. Boas Text Bk. Zool. ii. 24 The higher Crustacea.
1902 Encycl. Brit. XXVIII. 343/1 The embryonic stages of higher forms.
1936 E. G. Boulenger Apes & Monkeys 15 The apes and higher monkeys are quite as much reliant for their various needs upon the ground as among the tree-boughs.
1988 Q. N. Myrvik & R. S. Weiser Fund. Med. Bacteriol. & Mycol. (ed. 2) xxxvi. 503 The three classes comprising the higher fungi, are characterized by exogenous asexual spores called conidiospores, which are formed on conidiophores.
2012 J. Frýda in J. A. Talent Earth & Life 398/1 The shell-less state of some higher molluscs, like slugs and squids, has developed secondarily.
III. In senses corresponding to high adj. III.
6. Greater in value, size, quantity, pitch, degree, or intensity.
ΚΠ
OE Regularis Concordia (Tiber.) (1993) xlviii. 99 Tunc, uoce sublimiore, dicat : þænne stefne heahran cweþe.
a1225 (?OE) MS Vesp. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 243 (MED) We scule bien..imeaded mid heahere mede.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 3859 Mid hæhȝere stefne.
1467 in Rec. Parl. Scotl. to 1707 (2007) 1467/10/9 To set it [sc. the crown groat] heare or laware as salbe thocht spedefull.
a1500 ( Vision E. Leversedge in Notes & Queries Somerset & Dorset (1905) 9 31 (MED) This mantel was lengar and the colour higher.
1567 Gen. Assembly in R. Keith Hist. Affairs Scotl. (1734) 589 He shall take no higher Prices than is appointed.
1609 in W. Cramond Rec. Elgin (1903) I. 232 The..derth of bootis and shoone..daylie ryseis to heicher priceis.
1655 Ld. Orrery Parthenissa III. ii. ii. 125 Bidding his Threasurer give him higher Rewards, than the Prisoner could be Master of.
1772 W. Tans'ur Elements Musick iii. 71 The Lombardy, and Venice Pitch, is a Tone higher than ours, or theirs at Rome.
1790 Act 30 Geo. III c. 37 §2 Spirits of any greater or higher Degree of Strength than that of One in Six under Hydrometer Proof.
1861 Amer. Agriculturist July 193/3 Labor is generally from fifty to a hundred per cent higher than at other seasons, but it is very much better to employ it at any price.
1926 People's Home Jrnl. Feb. 50/1 It cooks at a temperature higher than boiling point.
1943 Econ. Jrnl. 53 377 As a result of the higher price of potatoes, all potato spirits are increased by 30%.
B. adv. The comparative of high adv. (in various senses).
I. In senses corresponding to high adv. I.
1. To, into, or in a higher physical position.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > high position > [adverb] > higher
highereOE
upwarda1300
upperc1384
uppermorec1400
superiorly1556
upwards1577
superior1718
the world > space > extension in space > measurable spatial extent > vertical extent > [adverb] > higher
upc888
highereOE
eOE tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (Tanner) iii. vi. 174 Heo wolden þone stan..hear [OE Corpus Oxf. heaor; L. altius] & gerisenlicor in þære ilcan stowe gesettan.
c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) l. 1637 Þe nihtegale ihrde þis An hupte uppon on bloþe ris And herre sat þan heo dude ear.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. iii. xvii. 112 Suche foules fleeþ hyere in þe aier.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 2232 A toure..þat may reche heghur [Gött. heier, Trin. Cambr. heȝer] þan heuen.
?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) i. pr. i. l. 41 When sche hef hir heued heyer sche perced[e] þe selue heuene.
tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) iii. l. 445 Putte hit on ayen, And more a litel herre vppon hit wrote.
c1720 N. Dubois & G. Leoni tr. A. Palladio Architecture III. vi. 13 I..mention'd it a little higher.
1793 B. Bell Treat. Gonorrhœa Virulenta I. §vii. 137 It sometimes happens that the inflammatory symptoms pass easily over the anterior part of the urethra, and shew themselves in more force and violence higher in the passage.
1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps i. xi. 74 Higher up the sky was violet.
1887 ‘S. Cumberland’ Queen's Highway 159 The train groaningly proceeds higher and higher.
1922 V. Woolf Jacob's Room ii. 21 Hats were raised higher than usual.
1998 A. Taylor Suffocating Night (2003) ix. 64 Howard waited and watched as the sun climbed higher in the sky.
II. In senses corresponding to high adv. II.
2. To or at a higher level, standing, value, degree, or pitch; more highly. Also: †further back in time (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > loudness > [adverb] > more loudly
higherOE
OE tr. Defensor Liber Scintillarum (1969) xvii. 166 Omnis superbia..tantoque profundius labitur, quanto excelsius eleuatur : ælc ofermodignyss..& swa micelum swa he deoppur byð asliden swa micelum swa he hegur byþ upp ahafen.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 44 (MED) Lyeȝe, zuerie, and uorzuerie, þe heȝere to zelle hare chapuare.
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 529 Min hert is so hauteyn þat herre he wold.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Luke xiv. 10 Frend, stiȝe hiȝere.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 724 Lat þou þi hert neuer þe hiȝere hale in-to pride.
c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) lxxxiii. 262 Speke out hyer that ye may the better be herde.
1570 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. xii. 128 Be Hanniballis, and heis ȝour hartis sum hear.
1591 (?a1425) Shepherds (Huntington) in R. M. Lumiansky & D. Mill Chester Myst. Cycle (1974) I. 143 All heaven might not have gonne harre.
1622 T. Stoughton Christians Sacrifice xvi. 221 He speaketh climatically, that is, riseth by degrees higher and higher.
1627 in A. Peterkin Rentals Earldom & Bishoprick of Orkney (1820) iii. 94 According to the rentell, quhilk to our knawledge can not be valued nor munted heigher nor it is alreddie.
1774 J. Bryant New Syst. II. 93 Sesostris..whose æra extends higher, than the Canon of Eusebius reaches.
1842 C. Whitehead Richard Savage II. ix. 293 He thought higher of human nature than he chose to acknowledge.
1878 T. Helmore Catech. Mus. xliii. 84 The contraltos and mezzo-sopranos may sing the bass an octave higher in the exercises.
1922 ‘K. Mansfield’ Garden Party 36 Mrs. Stubbs pumped the stove still higher.
1942 E. Waugh Put out More Flags (1943) ii. 85 Twenty-five pounds... Thirty. I can't go higher than thirty.
2008 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 7 Oct. f11/5 Typically, break fees are about 3 percent of the deal value, but they are creeping higher.
C. n.1
1. A person who or thing which is considered to be superior in some way; a better. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > raising > [noun] > one who
higherOE
raiser-upa1400
exalter1471
relevator1865
society > society and the community > social class > nobility > rank > [noun] > person of > specific superior
un-i-makeOE
betterOE
higherOE
greaterc1350
priora1425
overerc1443
superior?a1475
superordinate1816
OE tr. Defensor Liber Scintillarum (1969) xlvi. 294 Dum..ad altiora id est superiora intellegenda ducimur : þænne..to heagrum to understandendum we beoð gelædde.
OE Laws: Episcopus (Junius) x. 478 Þæt ænig Cristen man oðrum derige ealles to swyðe, ne se maga þam unmagan, ne se hearra þam heanran,..ne se hlaford his mannum.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 148 Inobediencia. þe child þet ne buweð hisaldre [sic]..Meiden hire dame. vch laȝere herre.
a1500 Eng. Conquest Ireland (Rawl.) (1896) 117 A pouere man..with lytel folke sholde come to doune and the toune wynne wyth-out Soccoure of any herrer [L. citra majoris auctoritatem].
1840 J. S. Mill in London & Westm. Rev. Mar. 142/1 His reliance is upon reverence for a Higher above them.
a1895 C. F. Alexander Poems (1896) iii. 321 And the priest unto a Higher Than the whole angelic choir Calleth; so he doth not slack.
1984 M. Faber tr. F. Nietzsche Human, All too Human 10 Here is a Higher, a Deeper, a Below-us, an enormous long ordering, a hierarchy which we see.
2. Superior position; the better of. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > [noun]
overhandc1175
masteryc1225
gree1320
betc1330
pricea1350
advantagea1393
overmasterya1400
voicea1400
betterc1405
higherc1450
prevaila1460
superiority1548
mastership1573
prevalence1604
eminence1609
privilegea1616
prevalency1623
upper fortunea1625
whipping-hand1682
whip hand1806
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 2364 Alexander with his armee..Has happend ȝit ai hedire-to þe herre [a1500 Trin. Dub. hyer] of his faes.
3. Scottish. Education. Chiefly with capital initial. The higher grade of the Scottish Certificate of Education, an examination taken or qualification gained at the end of an optional one-year course undertaken after compulsory schooling is over. Usually in plural. Cf. Standard grade n. at standard n., adj., and int. Compounds 2.Typically students take four or five Highers, often in order to meet a university entrance requirement.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > educational administration > examination > [noun] > school examinations
entrance examination1819
entrance exam1857
standard1862
skew1866
leaving examination1868
Oxford1871
entry exam1886
Abitur1918
higher1923
scholarship1950
A level1951
C.S.E.1963
international baccalaureate1966
A1979
Certificate of Secondary Education1981
AS1984
STEP1985
SAT1988
A21999
1910 Merchant Maiden (Edinb. Ladies' Coll.) Apr. 68 Some were brave enough to attempt Higher English, and even Higher French.]
1923 Schola Regia (Royal High School, Edinb.) Easter 13 The Scottish Education Department, who saw fit to make this one of the essay subjects in the Highers.
1947 Scottish Educ. Dept.: Secondary Educ. viii. 52 in Parl. Papers 1946–7 (Cmd. 7005) XI. 173 The Scottish Education Department..has adjusted its Leaving Certificate requirements to changing conditions.., and the minimum presentation is now only two Highers and three Lowers.
1967 H. Calvin Nice Friendly Town ix. 135 He asked me what my qualifications were, and I said the school Highers and the National Certificate.
1983 J. L. Ingard Winter Visitor xi. 95 Perhaps Joe would stay and do another year at school and take his Highers.
2007 C. MacFarlane Real Gorbals Story (2009) xviii. 141 St Bonaventure's—‘Bonnies’—was not exactly known for turning out anyone with an academic pedigree. It did not even do O Levels or Highers.

Phrases

P1. With the adjective.
a. to have the higher hand: to have the superiority; to gain the victory or mastery. Cf. upper hand n..
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > mastery or superiority > have or gain mastery, superiority, or advantage [verb (intransitive)]
risec1175
to have the higher handa1225
to have the besta1393
bettera1400
vaila1400
to win or achieve a checka1400
surmount1400
prevaila1425
to have (also get) the better handa1470
to go away with it1489
to have the besta1500
to have (also get, etc.) the better (or worse) end of the staff1542
to have ita1616
to have (also get) the laugh on one's side1672
top1718
beat1744
to get (also have) the right end of the stick1817
to have the best of1846
to go one better1856
a1225 (c1200) Vices & Virtues (1888) 127 Ðe dieules muȝen beȝelpen þat hie hafden ðe heiȝere hand ouer me.
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 3392 Israel Hadde hegere hond.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vi. l. 404 The heiere hond he hadde And victoire of his enemys.
c1405 (c1387–95) G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 401 If þt he faught and hadde the hyer hond.
a1450 (?a1300) Richard Coer de Lyon (Caius) (1810) l. 5239 And who that haves the heyer hand, Have the cyte and al her land.
a1500 (?c1450) Merlin viii. 124 That he myghte haue the hier honde.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 109v That holly the herhond hade at his wille.
1569 W. Samuel Abridgem. Olde Test.: Judges xx. sig. G.iiij Then did they pray and God them plight, to haue the higher hand.
1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) II. 1352/2 It will shortly haue the higher hand of all cloudes.
1653 R. Mead Combat Love & Friendship v. iv. 74 Hold, or I swear ere thou shalt have the higher hand, I'le rime thee to death.
1833 Age 21 July 229/2 The Tories have the higher hand.
1883 J. B. Cazenove St. Martin of Tours v. in St. Hilary of Poitiers & St Martin of Tours 208 During this life the sorrow bears the higher hand.
2008 Business Day (South Africa) (Nexis) 15 Mar. (Opinion & editorial section) 8 The women backing singers had the higher hand and were telling a good-for-nothing lover/husband to pack his bags and leave for good.
b. with a higher hand: see high adj. and n.2 Phrases 1.
P2. With the adverb.
a. Proverbs indicating the dangers of ambition or advancement.
(a) the higher one climbs, the further (also harder, lower, etc.) one falls and variants.
ΚΠ
a1450 Pater Noster Richard Ermyte (Westm. Sch. 3) (1967) 50 Euer þe hiȝer he clymbeþ, & for vnwarschip his feet hym fayle, þe sarrer & þe lower nedely he falliþ.
a1500 (c1340) R. Rolle Psalter (Univ. Oxf. 64) (1884) xxxvi. 21 (MED) Swa ill men, the heghere thai klymbe in honurs and riches, the soner thai dye.
?1532 T. Paynell tr. Erasmus De Contemptu Mundi v. sig. Cv Yet the hygher thou clymmest the sorer is thy fall So saythe the satyryan mayster Iuuenall.
1577 A. Golding tr. J. Calvin Serm. Epist. Ephesians iii. f. 122 The hygher that they clymb, the more horrible shall their fall bee.
1613 Bp. W. Cowper Holy Alphabet 269 They haue sometime in their pride, high imaginations; as if with the builders of Babel, they would mount vp into heauen: but the higher they mount, the lower they fall.
1659 N. Hardy First Epist. John: 2nd Pt. (ii. 15-16) xx. 404 The higher he climbeth over others heads, the sooner he breaketh his own neck.
1745 J. Kirkby Capacity & Extent Human Understanding 48 The higher Men climb, still the greater Danger is in their Fall.
1791 T. Priestley Crown of Eternal Glory: Funeral Serm. 26 Many are seized with the disorder of Haman; the higher they climb, the lower they fall.
1885 Spectator 7 Mar. 309/1 The higher you are the worse you fall.
1888 F. N. Peloubet & M. A. Peloubet Select Notes: Comm. on Internat. Lessons for 1889 337 The best worldly gifts of God..bring with them peculiar temptations. The higher one climbs the farther it is possible for him to fall.
1917 G. B. Lancaster Fool Divine 325 She was not yet wise enough to know that the higher a man climbs the greater his fall and the more it hurts him.
1987 Times 3 Mar. 34/7 There is no escape from scrutiny when you are champion. The higher you climb the harder you fall.
2002 Slate Mag. (Nexis) 21 June There was a time when the powerful dreaded failure; the belief was that the higher one climbed, the further one had to fall.
(b) the higher the monkey climbs, the more he shows his tail (also arse, etc.) and variants.
ΚΠ
?a1425 Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Claud.) (1850) Prov. iii. 35 Gloss. The filthe of the hyndrere partis of an ape aperith more, whanne he stieth an hiȝ.]
c1594 F. Bacon Promus of Fourmes & Elegancyes (Harl. 7017) in E. Durning-Lawrence Bacon is Shake-Spare (1910) 239 He doth like the ape that the higher he clymbes the more he shews his ars.
1658 J. Jones in tr. Ovid Invective against Ibis Comm. 42 Advancement shews the man; the higher the Ape climbs, the more she shews her naked parts.
a1739 C. Jarvis tr. M. de Cervantes Don Quixote (1742) II. iii. xviii. 266 And what care I? added Sanchica; let who will say, when they see me step it stately and bridle it, The higher the monkey climbs, the more he exposes his bald buttocks.
1742 A. Pope New Dunciad 3 (note) The higher you climb, the more you shew your A—.
1779 Gentleman's & London Mag. July 396/2 The higher he [sc. a monkey] climbs, the more he exposes what modesty and decency would teach him to hide.
1814 R. Bland Proverbs I. 153 ‘Tu fai come la simia, che piu va in alto, piu mostra il cula,’ that is, ‘an ape, the higher he climbs, the more he shews his tail.’
1853 Eclectic Med. Jrnl. Feb. 73 The higher the monkey climbs the pole The more he shows his tail.
1951 Life 17 Sept. 164/2 Invited to judge a Yale-Harvard debate.., he politely begged off... ‘I turned [it] down..on the theory that the higher a monkey climbs the more he shows his tail.’
1996 B. Bailey Taping Whores xxii. 332 ‘The higher you climb, the more you show your ass,’ Haug muttered in good humour.
b. Nautical. no higher (also come no higher): a command that a vessel go no closer to the wind. Cf. high adj. 15g. Now rare.
ΚΠ
c1550 Complaynt Scotl. (1979) vi. 32 Than the master cryit on the rudir man, mait keip ful and by, a luf, cumna hiear.
1839 Dearden's Misc. July 397 The frequent order which he gave to the man at the wheel of—‘Sted-dy, no higher, boy’—pronounced him to be the officer of the watch steering the vessel—which was sailing close hauled upon the starboard tack.
1841 B. J. Totten Naval Text-bk. xix. 150 She will come up as the wind hauls until ‘she is her course.’ Then give directions to the helmsman, to let her come ‘no higher’.
1863 S. B. Luce Seamanship (ed. 2) xxv. 471 Should the ship be standing along on a taut bowline, and the quartermaster perceives that a cloth or two of the main-topsail was lifting, he cries out, No higher! by which he means that the ship is not only too high, or too near the wind, but that she should go off a little.
1948 R. de Kerchove Internat. Maritime Dict. No higher!

Compounds

C1. Compounds of the adjective.
a. In noun phrases used attributively, corresponding to compounds of high adj. (see high adj. and n.2 Compounds 2a, Compounds 4; see also high frequency adj., high-grade adj., high-level adj.). Also higher class adj., higher-order adj. at Compounds 1b.
higher-end adj.
ΚΠ
1988 Computer Graphics World Feb. 56/2 Apple's market development manager responsible for emerging higher-end design applications.
2013 Herald-Times (Bloomington, Indiana) 1 Feb. d4/2 G&S has developed a strong niche market in construction of higher-end homes, all of which are pre-sold.
higher-energy adj.
ΚΠ
1950 Radiology 55 744/1 We were placed in a position of having continually to modify the definition of the roentgen in order to cope with the new properties of the higher-energy radiations.
2002 F. Close et al. Particle Odyssey vi. 87 Changing the frequency to keep in time with higher-energy particles would mean that any particles still at lower energies would become out of step.
higher-frequency adj.
ΚΠ
1936 R. S. Glasgow Princ. Radio Engin. iii. 71 Crowding the higher frequency stations together on the tuning dial of the condenser.
1991 Using Corpora (Proc. Conf. UW Centre for New OED) 141 Subsequent recourse to the larger, untagged corpus was useful..in verifying the Brown Corpus results for the higher frequency pairs.
2002 Nature 5 Dec. 471/1 The higher-frequency Rabi sideband at the laser frequency (ΩO + ΩR).
higher-grade adj.
ΚΠ
1862 9th Ann. Rep. State Superintendent Common Schools Maine 109 Such higher-grade certificates could be given by the normal schools, when established, or by a board of county examiners.
1891 Pop. Sci. Monthly May 121/1 Moral philosophy..is taught in some higher-grade schools.
1948 F. Brailsford Magn. Materials iv. 69 The most important source of internal strains in the higher grade soft magnetic materials.
2005 Dunoon Observer & Argyllshire Standard 15 July 16/1 The addition of a number of desirable items that hitherto have been reserved for higher grade models.
higher-income adj.
ΚΠ
1911 Q. Jrnl. Econ. 25 379 These unclaimed abatements are most numerous in the higher income groups affected.
1958 B. Abel-Smith in N. Mackenzie Conviction 59 The middle classes..participate with the higher income groups in special benefits from their employment.
2011 Independent 14 Dec. 14/3 Seventy-five per cent of three-year-olds in the higher-income group were read to every day.
higher-level adj.
ΚΠ
1906 Mind 15 339 In reproductive imagination the higher-level system in predominant activity at any one moment plays down upon the sensory level.
1967 Computers & Automation Feb. 30/1 A ‘programming language’, sometimes called a ‘higher level language’ (to distinguish it from the normal machine codes or assembly languages..).
2012 Independent 23 Oct. 2/5 A time when higher-level qualifications are becoming increasingly important.
higher-performance adj.
ΚΠ
1989 P. Horowitz & W. Hill Art of Electronics (ed. 2) ix. 612/2 Higher-performance cables use glass fibers.
1998 G. R. Capelo & R. C. Brenner VCR Troubleshooting & Repair (ed. 3) v. 112/1 Chromium dioxide tape has magnetic characteristics that fall between those of oxide tape and the higher performance metal tape.
higher-precision adj.
ΚΠ
1965 Jrnl. Soc. Industr. & Appl. Math. 2 299 In the polynomial problem the true use of higher precision arithmetic is unavoidable.
2006 D. H. Erwin Extinction iii. 86 By removing the outer part of the zircon crystal by mechanical abrasion, the result is seemingly higher precision analyses.
higher-quality adj.
ΚΠ
1917 Pop. Mech. Oct. 124 (advt.) The design and manufacture of higher quality products at lower cost.
1950 Beef Production on Farm (U.S. Dept. Agriculture) (rev. ed.) 3 The latter arrangement may make it possible to have a higher-quality bull than could be afforded by individual purchase.
2005 BusinessWeek 17 Jan. 45/2 Four ‘lifestyle’ stores offering higher-quality products.
higher-resolution adj.
ΚΠ
1974 Nature 6 Sept. 18/1 Higher resolution pictures of the planet than had previously been possible.
2003 Connecting Quarks with Cosmos (U.S. National Res. Council: Div. Engin. & Phys. Sci.) iv. 71 Even higher-resolution maps of the whole sky.
higher-risk adj.
ΚΠ
1945 Jrnl. Farm Econ. 27 178 North Dakota..is also a higher risk area.
2011 Philadelphia July 112/2 Men who fall into one of these higher-risk groupsy.
b.
higher command n. chiefly British Army the general staff of a military force collectively; (also) spec. the commander-in-chief.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > soldier > leader or commander > officer or soldier of rank > [noun] > staff officer > staff of officers
ordinary1526
generality1578
generalty1643
staff1781
état-major1805
headquarters1812
horse guards1826
higher command1842
high command1904
family1907
1842 Bombay Times 11 May Suppl. It was not until the force under General Pollock was brigaded, that he again fell into the higher command.
1914 Observer 24 Aug. 5/7 All this is perfectly understood by the higher command of the Allies.
1916 Times 15 Dec. 10/5 It was with great pain that he had heard the criticism upon the higher command. If there was one man in France who was trusted by every one from the highest to the lowest,..it was Sir Douglas Haig.
1927 E. Thompson These Men thy Friends 30 And as for the Higher Command! How many generals do you suppose we've got rid of, up to date?
1990 A. Beevor Inside Brit. Army xxiv. 294 The FINCO (Field Intelligence NCO) lives off his wits and out of touch with higher command.
2012 Washington Times (Nexis) 22 Nov. a9 The Chinese People's Liberation Army air force is feeling the heat from higher command for failing to produce enough qualified pilots.
higher court n. Law a court superior in the judicial hierarchy, typically having the power to overrule the decisions of courts which are beneath it; also figurative; cf. superior court n.
ΚΠ
1538 T. Elyot Dict. Prouocatio, an appele to an hyger court.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Evocation, an euocation..also, a calling before one by authoritie; a transferring, or remouing of causes vnto a higher Court by command of the Judges thereof.
1771 Gentleman's Monthly Apr. 221/2 All contempts are either punishable in the courts contemned or in some higher court.
1843 T. Carlyle Past & Present iii. viii. 243 The Higher Court..in which..every Human Soul is an apparitor.
1947 Internat. Law Rep. 44 viii. 236 The issue was the remission of the case by a higher court to a lower court and not the dismissal of the case by the magistrate.
2011 D. J. Baker Right not to be Criminalized vii. 245 The higher courts are not likely to judicially review the penalty unless it is patently excessive.
higher criticism n. [after German höhere Kritik (1815 or earlier)] now rare criticism, esp of the Bible, which examines the historical context in which a text was written; = historical criticism n. at historical adj. and n. Compounds 3; also with the.Contrasted with lower criticism n. at lower adj., n.1, and adv. Compounds 2b.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > text > criticism, interpretation > [noun] > higher criticism
criticism1625
higher criticism1822
1822 N. Amer. Rev. Jan. 52 Formerly professor in the university there of the oriental languages, biblical archaiology, higher criticism, and doctrinal theology.
1836 R. Keith tr. E. W. Hengstenberg Christol. Old Test. I. 414 A fundamental principle of the higher criticism [Ger. der höheren Critik].
1881 W. R. Smith Old Test. in Jewish Church (1892) 90 A series of questions affecting the composition, the editing, and the collection of the sacred books. This class of questions forms the special subject of the branch of critical science which is usually distinguished from the verbal criticism of the text by the name of Higher or Historical Criticism.
1927 S. Lewis Elmer Gantry ii. 34 It's fellows like you who break down the dike of true belief, and open a channel for higher criticism and sabellianism and nymphomania and agnosticism and heresy.
2007 Church Times 18 May 24/3 Biblical criticism, and then the higher criticism, revealed the Bible to be a book with a human history: a historical document composed of several strands written by human beings at different times, to be read in different ways.
higher critic n. now rare a person who engages in higher criticism.
ΚΠ
1827 D. G. Wait tr. J. L. Hug Introd. Writings New Test. II. i. 5 We..must consign its whole investigation to the jurisdiction of higher critics.
1897 J. Rendel Harris in Contemp. Rev. Sept. 342 He is a ‘higher critic’ occupied with the genesis of all Gospels out of their primitive deposit.
1957 Times 31 Oct. 13/4 The very word causerie is like a bell whose sound may grate harshly upon the ear of the Higher Critic.
1996 J. Updike In Beauty of Lilies 67 Think of these Huxleyites and Higher Critics and socialist scoffers not as reasonable men of good will like you and me but as devils in disguise.
higher education n. education beyond school, esp. to degree level at a university or similar educational establishment.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > [noun] > systematic education > higher education
higher learning1826
higher education1834
1741 Selecta Historica 141 To say that the softness of their [sc. women's] nature makes them incapable of a higher education..is doing them an unpardonable unjustice.]
1834 Edinb. Rev. Oct. 215 The oldest word for an unexclusive institution of higher education, was studium, and studium generale—terms employed in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and retained in those which followed.
1866 E. Davies (title) The higher education of women.
1884 C. Bird Higher Educ. in Germany & Eng. i. 5 Few [sc. people] realise to what an extent we are surpassed by Germany..as regards the liberal provision made for higher education.
1931 (title) Report of the Commission on Christian Higher Education in India.
1961 Sunday Times 26 Feb. 12/6 By 1970 there could be 140,000 children applying for the 70,000 places there will then be in higher education.
2011 Daily Tel. 14 July 2/5 An English ‘Ivy League’ consisting of just a handful of leading universities could develop as a result of government plans to shake up higher education, figures suggest.
higher law n. a divine law; a moral or religious principle that is believed to overrule secular constitutions and laws; also as a mass noun.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > activities of God > [noun] > law of
God's lawa1023
higher law1593
the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > activities of God > [noun] > law of > as implanted in human mind
law of kindc1225
law of naturec1470
the law of reason?1530
higher law1593
natural law1878
1593 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie i. 53 If here it be demaunded what that is which keepeth nature in obedience to her owne lawe, we must haue recourse to that higher lawe wherof we haue already spoken.
1678 V. Alsop Melius Inquirendum ii. viii. 305 A higher Law of God or Reasen may make a nullity in the Law of the Magistrate.
1728 J. S. Barrington Ess. Several Dispensations God to Mankind iii. 82 His [sc. Jesus] having also perform'd a perfect Obedience to a peculiar and a higher Law that he voluntarily put himself under.
1846 Brit. Q. Rev. Nov. 497 Every law of man supposes a higher law in the constitution of the world—a law of God, of which each law of man is only a particular application.
1984 R. David Sources of Law Introd. 18/2 Historically, the idea of higher law was linked with a view of the world, the social order, and justice, which arose from philosophical or religious beliefs independent of the temporal powers.
2013 Australian (Nexis) 25 Apr. 13 They feel that their duty to a higher law overwhelms their allegiance to those on the statute books.
higher learning n. advanced learning, esp. education or learning at college or university level.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > [noun] > systematic education > higher education
higher learning1826
higher education1834
1826 W. E. Andrews Exam. of Fox's Cal. of Protestant Saints, Martyrs III. 23 He was sent to the university of Cambridge, and there for some time applied himself with good success to higher learning.
1933 N.Y. Times 10 Dec. n3/1 The education of the part-time and adult student stands out..as a service which institutions of higher learning must recognize and to which they must adapt themselves.
2005 Metro (Toronto) 9 Feb. 1/5 Ontario universities say free-range tuition would not price higher learning out of reach of the average family.
higher-order adj. of, relating, or belonging to a high or the highest order of something; spec. (chiefly Psychology) involving or relating to thought or reasoning of an advanced level.
ΚΠ
1919 Psychol. Monogr. 26 No. 1. 28 The higher order learning curve which followed the first curve is not carried far enough with either of these two subjects to justify determining the learning coefficients for the first and second order curves.
1928 C. S. Whitehead & C. A. Hoff Ethical Sex Relations (new ed.) i. i. 31 That these seminal animalcules..are necessary to the beginning of life in all the higher order beings, is established beyond question.
1949 G. Ryle Concept of Mind vi. 198 The range of higher order acts and attitudes, which are apt to be inadequately covered by the umbrella-title ‘self-consciousness’.
1970 P. Scott Geogr. & Retailing i. 12 Large centres provide not only the low-order goods but also higher-order goods bought less frequently and for which shoppers will travel longer distances.
1982 Industry Week (Nexis) 15 Nov. 83 Some form of higher-order teleconferencing, such as voice-plus-facsimile, slow scan,..or full-motion video.
2008 D. Areily Predictably Irrational ix. 167 The dorsolateral aspect of the prefrontal cortex, DLPFC, an area involved in higher brain functions like working memory, associations, and higher-order cognitions and ideas.
higher plant n. any of a large group of plants considered to have a complex structure, characterized by the presence of distinct organs such as leaves, stems, roots, etc., and a well-developed vascular system; esp. a seed plant (angiosperm or gymnosperm); contrasted with lower plant.
ΚΠ
1821 tr. A. P. de Candolle & K. Sprengel Elements Philos. Plants iii. 53 In higher plants [Ger. in höhern Pflanzen] the germs press so much upon one another, that they commonly make their appearance enveloped by scales, in the axes of the leaves.
1884 Pop. Sci. Monthly July 387 In the higher plants, where the differentiation of structure is carried to a high degree, there is a very considerable portion of the body which has become incapable of further growth.
1940 Amer. Jrnl. Bot. 27 314/2 No higher plant has been proved to grow normally without calcium.
2010 Independent (Nexis) 29 July 4 Many [phytoplankton] are really bacteria, whilst others have all of the cellular machinery commonly found in higher plants.
higher power n. a divine or spiritual being, esp. God or a god, that governs human affairs and to which humankind is subject; (also, and in earliest use) a temporal ruler or authority viewed as a representative of God.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun]
godeOE
deityc1374
higher powerc1384
princec1384
divinityc1386
governorc1400
powerc1425
numen1495
fear1535
heaven1554
godheada1586
godhood1586
landlorda1635
supreme1643
supercelestial1652
supernal1661
universality1681
father1820
unspeakable1843
Molimo1861
Mlimo1897
superperson1907
somebody up there1972
sky fairy1997
society > authority > [noun] > those in authority > person or body
higher powerc1384
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Rom. xiii. 1 Euery soule, or lyuynge man, be suget to hiȝer poweris. Forsoth there is not power no but of God; sothli tho thingis that ben of God, ben ordeyned.
1588 J. Harvey Discoursiue Probl. conc. Prophesies 99 May it be deemed..that any higher power, or Secundeian godhead,..presently menaceth any such heinous mischeefes,..as are strongly imagined?
1703 F. Bugg Quakerism Drooping Pref. sig. A5 The Commands of their Princes are no farther obliging to them, than as they suit with..their Light within; which they account the higher Power, superior both to Scripture and Magistracy.
1870 Eclectic Mag. July 66/1 Religion rests chiefly on a belief in a Higher Power.
1969 Voice of Buddhism June 15/2 Buddhism refuses any efficacy to prayer and does not recognise a higher power outside ourselves to work out our salvation.
2015 F. Mathews Too Bad to Die xvi. 148 Hudson closed his eyes, as though willing a higher power to give him strength.
Higher School Certificate n. (also Higher Certificate) British Education (now historical) an examination instituted in 1917 and replaced in 1951 by the Advanced level General Certificate of Education, taken by pupils of about 18.
ΚΠ
1915 Times 30 Nov. 5/3 For 1918 a new Higher School Certificate Examination is announced.
1918 Univ. Cambr. Local Exam. Syndicate Higher School Certificate Exam. List 6 (heading) Exemption from the Previous examination by means of the higher school certificate examination.
1945 Guide Educ. Syst. Eng. & Wales (Min. of Educ. Pamphlet No. 2) Gloss. 58 Higher School certificate (higher certificate), certificate awarded on results of the examination taken at about 18 by grammar school pupils.
1963 H. C. Barnard & J. A. Lauwerys Handbk. Brit. Educ. Terms 106 The Higher School Certificate examination, which came into operation in 1917 and was conducted by certain university boards, was taken by pupils in grammar schools at about the age of 18. It was primarily intended to be a test of a two-years sixth form course of a somewhat specialised nature.
2001 E. Edwards Women in Teacher Training Colleges, 1900–1960 i. 21 The Higher School Certificate was a qualification for university entrance.
Higher Thought n. now historical = New Thought n.
ΚΠ
1878 W. Besant & J. Rice Monks Thelema I. iv. 950 What then was the good of having been a leader in undergraduate advanced circles, and an acknowledged exponent of the Higher Thought?
1897 Planets & People Dec. 417/1 A magazine devoted mainly to higher thought, to reformatory ideas and improvement..cannot compete in price with those published for the masses.
1906 H. W. Dresser Health & Inner Life x. 242 The term [sc. New Thought] was apparently a convenient designation... But critics soon assailed it on the ground that the doctrine was not new, and in England the term ‘Higher Thought’ was substituted.
1909 H. G. Wells Ann Veronica vi. 124 Jim is up to the neck in Mahatmas and Theosophy and Higher Thought and rot.
1909 G. K. Chesterton Orthodoxy v. 136 Of all conceivable forms of enlightenment the worst is..the Inner Light... Anyone who knows anyone from the Higher Thought Centre knows how it does work.
2002 Times (Nexis) 4 Feb. Mr Carlyle drove Mrs C mad, by sailing through life indifferent to everything but Higher Thought and dyspepsia.
C2. Uses of the adverb preceding participial adjectives to form compounds corresponding to those of high adv. Compounds 1, Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > quality of being better or superior > [adverb]
betOE
beforeOE
bettera1200
toforec1440
higherc1500
superiorlya1643
superior1762
c1500 Melusine (1895) xxi. 126 He is moche fayre & wel shapen of membres, & hath a face to deuyse, except that one of his eyen is hyer sette than the other is.
1575 G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 155 The higher fleeing that a Hawke is, the more neede..to regarde that you ouerflee hir not.
1598 R. Grenewey tr. Tacitus Annales i. iv. 7 A..higher aspiring minde.
1619 E. M. Bolton tr. Florus Rom. Hist. iv. ix. 457 The miserable ouerthrow of Crassus made the Parthians higher crested.
1651 A. Weamys Contin. Sydney's Arcadia 25 But Plangus thoughts were higher flown than these Portaitures could reach to.
1703 R. Neve City & Countrey Purchaser 63 A Hall..higher pitch'd.
1742 E. Young Complaint: Night the Second 8 Time higher-aim'd, still nearer the great Mark.
1800 Parl. Reg. 1797–1802 X. 699 The consumption of the higher priced teas has considerably increased even during the war.
1866 G. MacDonald Ann. Quiet Neighb. (1878) xxxiii. 586 She's higher-born than you.
1883 ‘M. Twain’ Life on Mississippi li. 502 Explosion followed explosion..the reports grew steadily sharper and higher-keyed.
1912 M. Beerbohm Christmas Garland p. v Tripping off the pens of all higher-toned reviewers.
1923 H. Crane Let. 21 July (1965) 142 Being with the largest advertising agency in the world..will get me higher-paid positions in other places after awhile.
1969 Punch 15 Jan. 91/3 Allied Breweries, the International Compressed Air Corporation or other proclaimed seekers of higher-educated manpower.
2009 Wall St. Jrnl. 15 July c14/5 Producers say the difficulty in selling higher-priced sustainable palm oils highlights the double standards.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2014; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

higherv.

Brit. /ˈhʌɪə/, U.S. /ˈhaɪər/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: higher adj.
Etymology: < higher adj. Compare earlier lower v. (later in transitive use). With sense 2 compare earlier highering adj.
1. transitive. To make higher (in various senses); to raise, elevate. Opposed to and frequently in conjunction with lower v.More usually expressed by raise.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > raising > make to go up or cause to rise [verb (transitive)] > raise
heave971
hevenOE
onheaveOE
rearOE
highOE
arearc1175
to set above (also aloft, high, on high)c1275
upbraidc1275
to set upc1290
lifta1300
upheavea1300
upraisea1300
upreara1300
enhancec1300
araise1303
hance1303
uplifta1340
lift1362
raisec1384
upbear1390
uphancec1390
advancea1393
haut?a1400
to put upa1400
verec1400
hainc1440
inhigh1483
elevate1497
uphigh1513
alifta1522
height1530
heighten1530
exalt1535
extol1549
sublevate1559
rouse?1567
attol1578
elate1578
vaunce1582
dight1590
higher1592
tower1596
to fetch up1612
relevate1620
screwa1625
transcend1635
stilt1649
allevate1696
stiltify1860
1592 in Acts Privy Council (1901) XXII. 553 Yt ys alledged that the bridge havinge ben highered duringe the mynorytie of Sir Edward Denney..was latelie taken downe.
1703 G. Garden tr. A. Bourignon Light risen in Darkness iii. i. 6 These Men understand not the Scriptures.., weighing me in their false Scales which have no just weights, but are higher'd or lower'd according to their own grandeur.
1794 D. Steel Elements & Pract. Rigging & Seamanship I. 55 The upper-plate has a dove-tail on the back, that slides up and down in a groove..and, by a staff, made fast to its front, it is highered or lowered.
1831 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 29 980 Our high opinion..has not been lowered..It has—pardon the expression—been highered.
1861 H. Mayhew London Labour (new ed.) III. 150/1 I highered the rope in my yard.
1908 Rep. Select Comm. Home Work 130/2 in Parl. Papers (H.C. 246) VIII. 1 The employer sees what she has priced it at. If it does not suit him he lowers it or highers it.
2012 Birmingham Post (Nexis) 27 Sept. 21 Egress [is] made easier for the driver by the steering wheel being automatically highered when the engine is switched off and lowered again when it is started.
2. intransitive. To become higher, to rise; (also) to allow of being highered. Cf. earlier highering adj. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > rise or go up [verb (intransitive)]
styc825
astyc950
ariseOE
upstyOE
to step upOE
upcomec1000
to come upOE
to go upOE
upwendc1200
runge?c1225
amountc1275
upgoa1325
heavec1325
uparise1340
ascend1382
higha1393
lifta1400
risea1400
skilla1400
uprisea1400
raisec1400
rearc1400
surmount1430
to get upc1450
transcenda1513
springa1525
upmounta1560
assurge?1567
hove1590
surgea1591
tower1618
hoist1647
upheave1649
to draw up1672
spire1680
insurrect1694
soar1697
upsoar1726
uprear1828
higher1889
1889 Birmingham Daily Post 30 Sept. 6/4 Quotations for forge and foundry bars are highering.
1905 Timber & Wood-working Machinery 18 Nov. 871/2 The table highers and lowers for various depths of mortise.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2014; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.2adj.adv.n.1eOEv.1592
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