From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhigh-levelˌhigh-ˈlevel ●○○ adjective [only before noun] 1 POSITION/RANKin a powerful position or job, or involving people who are in powerful positions or jobs high-level executiveshigh-level meetings/talks/negotiations etc a high-level conference on arms control2 LOT/LARGE NUMBER OR AMOUNTat a high degree or strength The virus has shown high-level resistance to penicillin.3 SLinvolving very technical or complicated ideas4 TDa high-level computer language is similar to human language rather than machine language → low-level
Examples from the Corpus
high-level• It's a high-level application programming interface that sits on a Unix-based personal computer equipped with call processing hardware.• a high-level attorney• He taught no high-level classes in black studies; the department, in fact, had no such classes.• However, other high-level Navy officials acknowledged the Nimitz had been hurriedly ordered to the Persian Gulf.• a high-level philosophical discussion• The virus has shown high-level resistance to penicillin.• To the same implications we may now add the advantages of having high-level staff expertise to call on.• The problem is to discover the procedures by which high-level units bring this about.high-level meetings/talks/negotiations etc• Although frequent high-level negotiations were subsequently, held, skirmishing continued.From Longman Business Dictionaryhigh-levelˈhigh-level adjective in a powerful position or job, involving people who are in powerful positions or jobshigh-level executivesThe President chaired a high-level meeting on the subject last month.