/ɦoːx/
OriginFrom Middle Low German hôch, earlier hô (inflected stem hôg-), from Old Saxon hōh.
Compare German hoch, Dutch hoog, Saterland Frisian hag, English high, Danish høj.
Formshöger(comparative) · an'n hööchsten(superlative) · he is hooch(masculine, predicative, singular) · se is hooch(feminine, predicative, singular) · dat is hooch(neuter, predicative, singular) · se sünd hooch(plural, predicative) · een Hoochs(masculine, partitive, singular) · een Hoochs(feminine, partitive, singular) · wat Hoochs(neuter, partitive, singular) · allens Hooch(partitive, plural) · hoge(masculine, nominative, singular, strong, without-article) · hoge(feminine, nominative, singular, strong, without-article) · hooch(neuter, nominative, singular, strong, without-article) · hoge(nominative, plural, strong, without-article) · hogen(masculine, oblique, singular, strong, without-article) · hoge(feminine, oblique, singular, strong, without-article) · hooch(neuter, oblique, singular, strong, without-article) · hoge(oblique, plural, strong, without-article) · de hoge(definite, includes-article, masculine, nominative, singular, weak) · de hoge(definite, feminine, includes-article, nominative, singular, weak)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0