pitch
nounA thick tenacious substance, the juice of a species of pine or fir called abies picea, obtained by incision from the bark of the tree. When melted and pressed in bags of cloth, it is received into barrels. This is white or Burgundy pitch; by mixture with lampblack it is converted into black pitch. When kept long in fusion with vinegar, it becomes dry and brown, and forms colophony. The smoke of pitch condensed forms lampblack.
pitch
The resin of pine, or turpentine, inspissated; used in caulking ships and paying the sides and bottom.
pitch
nounLiterally, a point; hence, any point or degree of elevation; as a high pitch; lowest pitch. How high a pitch his resolution soars. Alcibiades was one of the best orators of his age, notwithstanding he lived when learning was at its highest pitch.
pitch
Highest rise.
pitch
Size; stature. So like in person, garb and pitch.
pitch
Degree; rate. No pitch of glory from the grave is free.
pitch
The point where a declivity begins, or the declivity itself; descent; slope; as the pitch of a hill.
pitch
The degree of descent or declivity.
pitch
A descent; a fall; a thrusting down.
pitch
Degree of elevation of the key-note of a tune or of any note.
pitch
verb transitiveTo throw or thrust, and primarily, to thrust a long or pointed object; hence, to fix; to plant; to set; as, to pitch a tent or pavilion, that is, to set the stakes.
pitch
To throw at a point; as, to pitch quoits.
pitch
To throw headlong; as, to pitch one in the mire or down a precipice.
pitch
To throw with a fork; as, to pitch hay or sheaves of corn.
pitch
To regulate or set the key-note of a tune in music.
pitch
To set in array; to marshal or arrange in order; used chiefly in the participle; as a pitched battle.
pitch
To smear or pay over with pitch; as, to pitch the seams of a ship.
pitch
verb intransitiveTo light; to settle; to come to rest from flight. Take a branch of the tree on which the bees pitch, and wipe the hive.
pitch
To fall headlong; as, to pitch from a precipice; to pitch on the head.
pitch
To plunge; as, to pitch into a river.