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high heels
[hahy heels]
plural noun
women’s low-cut shoes with high, thin heels.
Word History and Origins
Origin of high heels1
Example Sentences
In a town known for sculpting movie stars, Aliabadi looks like she could be on “Grey’s Anatomy” as she towers in high heels and a sparkly pink and white butterfly necklace as she poses for a Los Angeles Times photographer.
At the beginning of “Mountainhead,” written and directed by Jesse Armstrong of “Succession” fame and premiering Saturday on HBO, three multibillionaire tech bros make their way by private plane, helicopter and SUV caravan to join a fourth in a big modernist house on an isolated, snowy mountaintop for a weekend of poker and drugs — “no deals, no meals, no high heels.”
I walk home in my high heels because I'm so proud of what Rachel accomplished, what all of us, the great John Benjamin Hickey, who plays the love of my life, and the great Tommy Sadoski.
Every scene has a delight: Manchi stabbing balloons with a knife, Edna’s out-of-place cloven-toed high heels, the lilt in Justin’s voice as he smiles at a street mutt and says, “’s up, dog?”
In the first dramatic black-and-white photo Taylor posted, the singer-songwriter-actor-model poses with her hands on her hips in a plunging black halter gown while the 6-foot-3 Pierre, much taller than his lady despite her high heels, stands formally, hands in pants pockets, in a tux with a white bow tie.
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