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höherer

höherer is a German adjective form derived from hoch, meaning high or tall. It functions as the comparative degree and is used to indicate that something has greater height, level, degree, or status compared with another element. The form is inflected to agree with the noun it modifies, so the ending changes with gender, number, and case.

In common usage, höh­er­er appears before masculine singular nouns in certain declensions. For example: ein höherer

The word can appear in a wide range of phrases, including material, measurements, levels, and rankings, such

Etymologically, höh­erer comes from hoch with a comparative suffix, following regular German development from Old High

Berg
(a
higher
mountain)
or
der
höhere
Turm
(the
higher
tower).
In
other
contexts
the
ending
varies:
einen
höheren
Berg
(accusative
masculine,
indefinite
article)
or
auf
höherer
Ebene
(dative
feminine,
no
article).
With
plural
nouns,
the
form
changes
again:
die
höheren
Türme
(the
higher
towers)
or
höhere
Bildung
in
fixed
phrases
where
the
first
element
serves
as
a
modifier.
as
höherer
Wert
(higher
value)
or
höherer
Rang
(higher
rank).
It
is
not
a
proper
noun
and
is
not
capitalized
unless
starting
a
sentence.
The
construction
reflects
standard
German
adjective
declension
patterns,
where
the
ending
adapts
to
article
presence
and
grammatical
case.
German
into
modern
usage.
Today
it
is
common
in
academic,
technical,
and
everyday
language
to
express
increased
height,
level,
or
degree.