Associations to the word «Summit»
Noun
- Basalt
- Mallory
- Gondola
- Seoul
- Divide
- Kilometre
- Millennium
- Kuala
- Meter
- Singularity
- Utah
- Pointe
- Skyline
- Valley
- Upland
- Bali
- Conference
- Sierra
- Bucharest
- Dhabi
- Steeple
- Tower
- Dhaka
- Hilltop
- Northeast
- Upward
- Meeting
- Andes
- Tops
- Cloud
- Crosse
- Alta
- Nikita
- Scenery
- Crevice
- Laureate
- Stakeholder
- Mikhail
- Globalization
- Pine
- Grandeur
- Headwater
- Foothill
- Expedition
- Gradient
- Vilnius
- Limestone
- Eisenhower
- Rift
- Islamabad
- Descent
- Observatory
- Fuji
- Disarmament
- Huntsville
- Arab
- Vegetation
- Vent
- Southwest
- Extremity
- Modus
- Wilderness
- Helmut
- Top
Adjective
Wiktionary
SUMMIT, noun. (countable) A peak; the top of a mountain.
SUMMIT, noun. (countable) A gathering or assembly of leaders.
SUMMIT, verb. (transitive) (hiking) (climbing) (colloquial) To reach the summit of a mountain.
SUMMIT FEVER, noun. (mountaineering) The compulsion to reach the summit of a mountain at all costs.
SUMMIT FEVER, noun. (figurative) (by extension) The obsessive need to complete a task.
Dictionary definition
SUMMIT, noun. The highest level or degree attainable; the highest stage of development; "his landscapes were deemed the acme of beauty"; "the artist's gifts are at their acme"; "at the height of her career"; "the peak of perfection"; "summer was at its peak"; "...catapulted Einstein to the pinnacle of fame"; "the summit of his ambition"; "so many highest superlatives achieved by man"; "at the top of his profession".
SUMMIT, noun. The top or extreme point of something (usually a mountain or hill); "the view from the peak was magnificent"; "they clambered to the tip of Monadnock"; "the region is a few molecules wide at the summit".
SUMMIT, noun. A meeting of heads of governments.
SUMMIT, verb. Reach the summit (of a mountain); "They breasted the mountain"; "Many mountaineers go up Mt. Everest but not all summit".
Wise words
In words, as fashions, the same rule will hold; Alike
fantastic, if too new, or old: Be not the first by whom the
new are tried, Nor yet the last to lay the old aside.