high-water mark
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]high-water mark (plural high-water marks)
- (literal) A mark, such as a line of seaweed, showing the highest level reached by a body of water.
- 1961 January, “Talking of Trains: The Severn Bridge disaster”, in Trains Illustrated, page 5:
- This imposing structure, which not only carries the single track branch line but also the gas main supplying the Forest of Dean area, cost £200,000 when it was built in 1879, and at its highest point is 70ft above the high-water mark.
- (by extension, figurative) The peak, apex or acme of something; the maximum level; the furthest or highest point.
- The Gettysburg campaign was the high-water mark of the Confederacy's invasions of the North.
Translations
[edit]mark showing the highest level reached by a body of water
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