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high key
1noun
- a style of lighting that is bright, even, and produces little contrast between light and dark areas of the scene.
high-key
2[ hahy-kee ]
adjective
- (of a photograph) having chiefly light tones, usually with little tonal contrast ( low-key ).
high-key
adjective
- (of a photograph, painting, etc) having a predominance of light grey tones or light colours Compare low-key
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of high key1
Origin of high key2
Example Sentences
As the enterprise has taken on huge levels of debt to finance its rapid expansion, a Fitch Ratings subsidiary has warned of high âkey manâ risk, with the conglomerate so firmly connected to Mr. Adani.
One was my Jonathanâs, raised in a high key of passion; the other Mr. Morrisâ strong resolute tone of quiet command.
The caption: âHigh key more comfortable being myself on this app than in my hometown.â
â±őâm all for giving back, if thatâs what youâre going to do. This ⊠high key degrading though,â another Twitter user posted.
âThese fumes got me zeeted high key.â
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About This yĐÄvlog
What else does high-key mean?
In slang, high-key is the opposite of the more commonplace low-key, or âsecretiveâ or ârestrained.â So something high-key is âintenseâ and âout in the open.â Itâs often used as an adverb for âvery,â âreally,â or âclearly.â
Where does high-key come from?
High-key is a technical photography term for particularly bright lighting style. Itâs been in use since the early 1900s. Before then, in the world of music, sound, and public speaking, high-key described notes with a high pitch, with evidence dating to the 1800s.
These days, the slang high-key is used a bit differently, though it may draw from notions of âbrightâ and âpitchâ as in the termâs historical senses. First came the slang low-key, for âcasualâ or âon the down-low,â in the late 2000s. It was being used as an adverbâe.g., â±őâm low-key into her,â to express mild interestâby the 2010s in hip-hop lyrics.
High-key functions as a natural opposite to low-key: characterizing something done with intensity, energy, or calling attention to itself.
An early instance comes in the 2013 song â3 The Hardwayâ by rapper Young Roddy:
Spend on smoke what these ni**as spend on for the whole Key
Low key, or High key
Drop a piano on your head if you try me
Or Young Roddy fly in the Maserati
It was likely Drake, as with so many slangs terms in the 2010s, who helped popularize high-key on Nicki Minajâs 2014 track âOnlyâ:
Yeah, low-key or maybe high-key
I been peeped that you like me, you know?
How is high-key used in real life?
High-key is common in hip-hop lyrics, even as the title of some songs, such as R&B artistâs Che Ecruâs 2016 âHIGHKEY.â
But it has spread to mainstream youth slang, where it can be used as an adjective for âintenseâ or âovertâ (e.g., âThe party was łóŸ±Č”łó-°ì±đČââ) or as an adverb for âa lot,â âvery much,â or âobviouslyâ (e.g., â±őâm high-key about this new Ariana Grande singleâ)
WellâŠI just paid off one of my student loans. It wasnât the big one but itâs something. ±őâm highkey happy too.
â [redacted] (@_mister151)
Im highkey pissed at my mom
â woo love club (@parkseonghwaa)
More examples of high-key:
âThe place I lived up in Georgia in high schoolâI was in the forestâŠLike high-key, middle of nowhere, no cars type shit. It was really peaceful and sereneâŠâ
âChester Watson quoted by GFarmaNews, October 2018
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the termâs history, meaning, and usage.
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