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ADVERB
  1. in a lavish or enthusiastic manner
    he extolled her virtues sky-high
  2. to a very high level
    garbage was piled sky-high
    the men were flung sky-high by the explosion
    prices have gone sky-high
  3. (with verb `to blow') destroyed completely; blown apart or to pieces
    they blew the bridge sky-high
    the committee blew the thesis sky-high

How To Use sky-high In A Sentence

  • The interest rates are sky-high, and if you lose control just a couple of times you're pretty much screwed.
  • Bills will remain sky-high as it drags on. The Sun
  • Bettie Page bangs and high ponytails for the ladies, sky-high quiffs for the guys.
  • Not only that, the interest at these sky-high levels will also be back-dated to when you took out the agreement.
  • Expert view: His cholesterol levels must be sky-high.
  • Town halls are clawing back cash lost in public sector cuts by charging families sky-high prices to bury loved ones. The Sun
  • And with Americans eating out more often, anyone who measured the sky-high salt levels in restaurant foods could have predicted trouble.
  • The saving grace to the whole artistic endeavour is that the works are classic verismo operas with sky-high true-life grit.
  • Hong Kong's sky-high home prices are the highest among those surveyed in a report by research firm Demographia. Hong Kong Homes Rank Last in Affordability
  • Its sky-high ceilings, huge shuttered windows and fireplaces bigger than my box room take the breath away. The Sun
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