2008 July 15, Edward Morgan Forster, Christopher Isherwood, Letters Between Forster and Isherwood on Homosexuality and Literature, Palgrave MacMillan:
Then I got back here - difficulty again: no trolly-bus, and and black pitcher than black - and have since been conning the Beveridge Report.
2013 February 26, Dale E. Basye, Snivel: The Fifth Circle of Heck, Yearling, →ISBN, page 162:
If you lose even once, that's it: The screen goes, like, the pitchest black ever, and you're [out].
2016 August 30, Mandy Arioto, Starry-Eyed: Seeing Grace in the Unfolding Constellation of Life and Motherhood, Zondervan, →ISBN, page 19:
For some of us postpartum depression is the pitchest black we have ever known. From the dark womb we welcome new life, and our own new life, a life we haven't known, unfolds[…]
1845, Owen Connellan, Annals of Ireland: Translated from the Original Irish of the Four Masters[1], page 179:
“The two men of Alltraighe maintain, Two chiefs of the plain of Kerry, A clan the most active in pitch of battle, Their chiefs are O’Neide and Clan Conary.”
Every other day they would spend half of the training hours on the battle pitch.
2018, Christopher R. Lakey, Sculptural Seeing: Relief, Optics and the Rise of Perspectives in Medieval Italy[3], page 84:
George’s cult was popular in the east because of his legendary feats on the battle pitch and because of the location of his tomb, which was a pilgrimage site.
The distance between evenly spaced objects, e.g. the teeth of a saw or gear, the turns of a screw thread, the centres of holes, or letters in a monospacefont.
The pitch of pixels on the point scale is 72 pixels per inch.
The pitch of this saw is perfect for that type of wood.
A helical scan with a pitch of zero is equivalent to constant z-axis scanning.
The propeller blades' pitch went to 90° as the engine was feathered.
An area in a market (or similar) allocated to a particular trader.
(by extension) The place where a busker performs, a prostitute solicits clients, or an illegal gambling game etc. is set up before the public.
1975, Tom A. Cullen, The Prostitutes' Padre, page 94:
Another reason is that the prostitute who makes her pitch at Marble Arch stands a chance of being picked up by an out-of-town business man stopping at one of the hotels in the vicinity, and of being treated to a steak dinner […]
An area on a campsite intended for occupation by a single tent, caravan or similar.
A level or degree, or (by extension), a peak or highest degree.
In the eyes of Mr. Farquhar Fenelon Cooke the apotheosis of the Celebrity was complete. The people of Asquith were not only willing to attend the house-warming, but had been worked up to the pitch of eagerness.
2014, James Booth, Philip Larkin: Life, Art and Love, page 190:
In this poem his 'vernacular' bluster and garish misrhymes build to a pitch of rowdy anarchy […]
A point or peak; the extreme point of elevation or depression.
1667, John Milton, “Book II”, in Paradise Lost.[…], London: […] [Samuel Simmons], and are to be sold by Peter Parker[…]; [a]nd by Robert Boulter[…]; [a]nd Matthias Walker,[…], →OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books:[…], London: Basil Montagu Pickering[…], 1873, →OCLC:
Driven headlong from the pitch of heaven, down / Into this deep.
2014, John Narborough, Abel Tasman, John Wood, An Account of Several Late Voyages and Discoveries to the South and North, →ISBN:
From the pitch of Cape-Fraward, to the pitch of Cape-Holland, the Streight lies in the Channel West and by North, nearest, and is distant full five Leagues;
1624, Democritus Junior [pseudonym; Robert Burton], The Anatomy of Melancholy:[…], 2nd edition, Oxford, Oxfordshire: […] John Lichfield and James Short, for Henry Cripps, →OCLC, partition II, section 3, member 2:
Alba the emperor was crook-backed, Epictetus lame; that great Alexander a little man of stature, Augustus Cæsar of the same pitch[…].
(climbing) A section of a climb or rock face; specifically, the climbing distance between belays or stances.
1950 April, Timothy H. Cobb, “The Kenya-Uganda Railway”, in Railway Magazine, page 265:
The line turns a sharp right-angle to the north to circumvent the town, and then plunges straight into the 1 in 50, which lasts for nearly 20 miles with few intermissions, and some pitches of 1 in 40.
1967, Anthony Greenbank, Instructions in Mountaineering, page 84:
You lead "through" instead — your companion leads a pitch, then you join him. But instead of swapping over at the ice axe belay, you carry on in the lead, cutting or kicking steps until you are about twenty feet above.
(caving) A vertical cave passage, only negotiable by using rope or ladders.
The entrance pitch requires 30 metres of rope.
(cricket) That point of the ground on which the ball pitches or lights when bowled.
2024 April 16, Gaby Hinsliff, “Liz Truss has kindly offered to ‘save the west’. But who will save her from her delusions?”, in The Guardian[4]:
Why not, when it was clearly now possible to pitch your tent well beyond whatever expert consensus considered reasonable and be lionised instead of punished [...]
(intransitive) To fix or place a tent or temporary habitation; to encamp.
His bone leg steadied in that hole ; one arm elevated, and holding by a shroud ; Captain Ahab stood erect, looking straight out beyond the ship's ever-pitching prow.
Half a dozen deserted boats pitched aimlessly upon the confusion of the waves.
(transitive) To set at an angle, especially a downwards one; to cause to tilt.
2020 August 4, Don Kostelec, ““Fully implement ADA.” Do agencies know what that means?”, in Kostelec Planning[5]:
Driveway cross slopes along Owyhee Street in Boise reach nearly 9%, which could cause a person in a wheelchair or using another mobility device to be pitched into the street. The cross slope should be no greater than 2% in order to prevent this.
1707, J[ohn] Mortimer, The Whole Art of Husbandry; or, The Way of Managing and Improving of Land.[…], London: […] J[ohn] H[umphreys] for H[enry] Mortlock[…], and J[onathan] Robinson[…], →OCLC:
1801, Thomas Coke, chapter 11, in A Commentary on the Holy Bible: Commentary on the Old Teatament[6], Joshua, page 51, verse 5:
They pitched at the waters of Merom. These waters of Merom are generally thought to be nothing but the lake of Semechon,[…]
1866, Charles Dickens, Works: Sketches by Boz: Illustrative of Every-day Life and Every-day People with Illustrations by George Cruikshank[7], page 65:
“Vy don’t you pitch into her Sarah?” exclaims one half-dressed matron by way of encouragement.
1868, Rock Ruin; or the Daughter of the Island, page 23:
Yet I sometimes long to pitch at him for daring to lift his eyes this way; I always feel the blood tingling at my finger’s end whenever he crosses my path.
1886, James Osgood Andrew Clark, Elijah Vindicated: Or The Answer by Fire[8], page 378:
On the seventh day after the two armies were pitched against each other in the plain before Aphek the battle was joined, the Syrians were routed, and a hundred thousand of their foot-men were slain in one day.
1892, Louis Barnett Abrahams, A Manual of Scripture History for Use in Jewish Schools and Families[9], page 72:
The Philistines, hearing that Israel were assembled at Mizpeh, raised an army and pitched against them.
2015, William Dean Howells, Delphi Complete Works of William Dean Howells:
He would pitch into her, and pitch into himself, and then he would dwell on her good qualities, […]
2016, A. González Enciso, War, Power and the Economy: Mercantilism and state formation in 18th-century Europe[10], page 144:
If Spain was to fight in the Americas, for example, the Royal Navy could pitch against it over 300 ships in the seventies (Morris 2011:13-32), deployed in various parts of the world.