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high season

NOUN
  1. the season when travel is most active and rates are highest
    they traveled to Europe in high season

How To Use high season In A Sentence

  • Hotels usually raise their prices in high season.
  • Booking rooms in high season would be expensive and uncertain, so I packed a small tent, picked up a hire car from Alghero airport and set off round the coast anticlockwise - the road less travelled.
  • Hotels usually raise their prices in high season.
  • A junior suite costs 287 a night half board in high season. Times, Sunday Times
  • Despite their differences, the two oceans support basically similar food webs, with high seasonal productivity from small overwintering standing crops.
  • A lesson relearnt: if a destination has a 'high season', there's usually a good reason. Times, Sunday Times
  • The problem here in most popular places in the high season a reservation is a must. Eating out
  • They rode into the outer courtyard, through the muckle faulding yetts, and aneath the auld portcullis; and the whole front of the house was lighted, and there were pipes and fiddles, and as much dancing and deray within as used to be at Sir Robert’s house at Pace and Yule, and such high seasons. Wandering Willie’s Tale
  • This is a sleepy place, even in high season, but it attracts a community of surfers year-round, many coming for the world-class waves at Anchor Point.
  • The most you will get for a gîte is £600 in high season, £300 in the low.
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