Apogee is often used in its figurative sense, signifying the high point of a career, endeavor, or state (“she was at the apogee of her profession”). This meaning developed as a metaphorical extension of the word’s astronomical sense, denoting the farthest distance from earth of an object orbiting the planet.
A number of other English words that are synonymous with apogee have followed a similar path of figurative development from a technical meaning. Climax (“the most interesting and exciting part of something”) came into English as a term for a series of phrases arranged in ascending order of rhetorical forcefulness. And, very much like apogee, culmination (“the final result of something”) is also rooted in astronomy: it originally referred to the highest point a celestial body reaches in its daily revolution (for example, the sun’s height at noon).
shag carpeting reached the apogee of its popularity in the 1970s but is now considered outdated
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In astrology, the Black Moon Lilith is a point in the sky that sits near the lunar apogee (a.k.a.—Roya Backlund, StyleCaster, 24 Jan. 2025 The apogee also marked the farthest any human has journeyed since NASA’s Apollo Program ended in 1972.—Jackie Wattles, CNN, 15 Sep. 2024 And the Ukrainian nationalist movement of the 1930s and 1940s, including its heroic partisan guerrilla campaigns against the Soviets, was the apogee of the national liberation struggle against Moscow’s totalitarianism.—Georgiy Kasianov, Foreign Affairs, 4 May 2022 As evidence mounts, The Perfect Neighbor steadily and deftly builds momentum until its crushing apogee.—Lovia Gyarkye, The Hollywood Reporter, 3 Sep. 2019 See all Example Sentences for apogee
Word History
Etymology
French apogée, from New Latin apogaeum, from Greek apogaion, from neuter of apogeios, apogaios far from the earth, from apo- + gē, gaia earth
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