ˈhigh-rise BrE AmE adjective [only before noun]
high-rise buildings are tall buildings with many levels
—high rise noun [countable] :
They live in a high rise on the East Side.
⇨ ↑ low-rise
• • •
THESAURUS
■ buildings/mountains etc
▪ high measuring a long distance from the bottom to the top – used about mountains, walls, and buildings:
the highest mountain in the world
|
The castle was surrounded by high walls.
|
a high cliff
|
The council told the architects the tower was too high.
▪ tall high – used about people, trees, plants, and buildings. Tall is used especially about things that are high and narrow:
tall marble columns
|
A cat was hiding in the tall grass.
|
a tall modern building
▪ majestic especially written very impressive because of being very big and tall – used about mountains, buildings, trees, and animals:
the majestic mountains of the Himalayas
|
The abbey is noted for its majestic arches, fine doorways and elegant windows.
|
The cathedral looked majestic in the evening light.
▪ soaring [only before noun] especially written used about a building or mountain that looks extremely tall and impressive:
a soaring skyscraper
|
the soaring towers of the palace
▪ towering [only before noun] especially written extremely high, in a way that seems impressive but also often rather frightening:
The sky was shut out by the towering walls of the prison.
|
towering trees
▪ lofty [usually before noun] literary very high and impressive – used in literature:
the lofty peaks in the far distance
▪ high-rise [usually before noun] a high-rise building is a tall modern building with a lot of floors containing apartments or offices:
a high-rise apartment block
|
He works in a high-rise office in New York.