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Pitch Sound quality of highness or lowness; primarily dependent on the frequency of the sound wave.
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Pitch(1) The incline slope of a roof, or the ratio of the total rise to the total width of a house. For example, an 8-foot rise and 24-foot width is a 1/3-pitch roof. Roof slope is expressed in the inches [..]
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PitchThe pace and flow of a product.
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PitchThe pitch of a note accords to the frequency of its vibrations. The exact pitch of notes has varied over the years and nowadays differs to some extent between continent and continent or even between orchestra and orchestra. Earlier pitches were generally lower, but not necessarily standardised. ‘Perfect pitch’ is the ability to distinguish the pitc [..]
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Pitch(1) That property of sound which is determined by the frequency of the sound waves. (2) Distance from the center of one perforation on a film to the next; or from one thread of a screw to the next; or [..]
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PitchTheoretical distance a propeller would travel in one revolution. Also, the rise and fall of a boat's bow and stern.
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PitchThe angle of the back part of the heel where it meets the sole, compared to the front part of the heel where it meets the sole. On a high-heeled shoe the pitch should be at a larger angle, in order to [..]
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Pitch"to cover with pitch," Old English pician, from the source of pitch (n.2).
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Pitch1520s, "something that is pitched," from pitch (v.1). Meaning "act of throwing" is attested from 1833. Meaning "act of plunging headfirst" is from 1762; sense of "sl [..]
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Pitchc. 1200, "to thrust in, fasten, settle," probably from an unrecorded Old English *piccean, related to prick (v.). The original past tense was pight. Sense of "set upright," as in p [..]
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Pitch"resinous substance, wood tar," late 12c., pich, from Old English pic "pitch," from a Germanic borrowing (Old Saxon and Old Frisian pik, Middle Dutch pik, Dutch pek, Old High Germa [..]
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Pitchnoun tilt noun tone of sound noun talk to convince verb throw, hurl verb put up, erect verb dive, roll
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PitchAn English word for a sports field. It is not specific to soccer -- there are cricket and field hockey and rugby pitches as well. It has come into vogue in the United States, mouthed by those who feel [..]
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PitchThe frequency of a note determining how high or low it sounds.
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PitchA term used to describe the angle of a roof. For example: A 4-12 pitch indicates that the roof rises 4" vertically for each 12" horizontally.
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Pitch(1) Of the three axes in flight, this specifies the vertical action, the up-and-down movement. Compare ROLL and YAW. (2) The angle of a propeller or rotor blade in relation to its arc; also the distan [..]
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PitchThe inclination of a seam; the rise of a seam.
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PitchThe angle of the rear part of the heel where it meets the sole.
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PitchPitch [N] [S]( Genesis 6:14 ), asphalt or bitumen in its soft state, called "slime" ( Genesis 11:3 ; 14:10 ; Exodus 2:3 ), found in pits near the Dead Sea (q.v.). It was used for various pur [..]
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Pitchplaying field, such as for soccer or cricket.
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Pitchproperty of a sound wave informed by its wavelength and frequency.
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PitchThe oscillation of a ship about the lateral axis, that is, alternate rising and falling of bow and stern. See roll, yaw, ship motion.
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Pitchis a subjective auditory sensation and depends on the frequency, the harmonic content, and to a lesser extent on the loudness of a sound.
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PitchIn linguistics, a semi-musical tone or quality used in some languages to distinguish meaning.
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PitchA briefing, either formal or informal. [D03668]
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Pitchfield
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Pitch("pitch shot") a relatively short, lofted shot designed to land softly and not roll much (differs from a chip in its trajectory and amount of roll) Example: The pitch/pitch shot is v [..]
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Pitchpitch shot; a relatively short, lofted shot designed to land softly and not roll much (differs from a chip in its trajectory and amount of roll)
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PitchSubstance produced by mesquite trees that can be used as a black paint
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PitchA pitch shot, short from pitch, is a particular shot in golf. It is performed with a high lofted golf club, for example the pitching wedge, the gap wedge or the lob wedge. Characteristically for the pitch is, that it is a shot with a short distance and a steep ascent and descent and with the intention, that the golf ball is in the air most of the d [..]
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Pitchfield (football) [GB "football" = US "soccer"]
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PitchShot used to approach the green, shorter swing than normal, but longer and more lofted than a chip.
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Pitcha short shot (typically from within 50 yards), usually played with a higher lofted club and made using a less than full swing, that is intended to flight the ball towards a target (usually the hole) w [..]
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Pitchthe property of sound that varies with variation in the frequency of vibration flip: throw or toss with a light motion; "flip me the beachball"; "toss me newspap [..]
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PitchA high shot played from anywhere between 15 to 100 yds from the hole.
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Pitch An approach shot to the green. The player does not use a full swing during a pitch shot. This shot is shorter than a normal swing, but longer than a chip shot.
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PitchA short shot, lofting the ball into the air in a high arc and landing with backspin.
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Pitch a short swing shot, normally high in the air that doesn’t use a full swing.
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PitchA short shot (typically from within 50 yards), usually made using a less than full swing, to flight the ball towards the hole.
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Pitch(aka: "pitch shot") a shot that is intended to travel a relatively short distance and land softly ont he green so as to not roll very far. Example: "Jim pitched the ball on [..]
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PitchPitch is a lofted shot played from an area around the green.
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PitchOne of several types of shots that are defined as short shots
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PitchLonger than a chip shot but shorter than a full approach. Usually, pitch shots are taken from closer than 100 yards to the green.
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PitchThere are many different definitions of a pitch, but I define pitch shots as those which cover the distance gap from 30 yards to wherever your shortest full swing distance is.
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Pitcha short shot (typically from within 50 yards), usually played with a higher lofted club and made using a less than full swing.
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PitchAn approach shot made with a short iron. There are four basic kinds of pitch shot: one in which the ball is given top spin to let it run along the green toward the cup (pitch-and run); one in which it [..]
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PitchA ball you hit high into the air onto the green using a lofted club and less than a full swing.
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PitchA rotational motion in which an airplane turns about its lateral axis. Pushing forward on the control stick will lower the elevators, which forces the tail upward. The pilot will then see the nose of the aircraft fall or pitch.
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PitchA short shot lofting the ball into the air in a high arc and landing with backspin.
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PitchSimilar to the Lob Shot and designed to deliver the ball to the green without much forward roll.
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PitchA golf shot with high arc that lands on the green and usually stops quickly.
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Pitchto throw or fall forward: to set something up, such as a tent or a stall in market. The same word also means the highness or lowness of musical notes
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PitchSynonym lay length.
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Pitch(1) Of the three axes in flight, this specifies the vertical action, the up-and-down movement. Compare ROLL and YAW. (2) The angle of a propeller or rotor blade in relation to its arc; also the distan [..]
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PitchA pitch is a lofted shot onto the green, often with little run at the end of its flight, hopefully in the direction of the hole.
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Pitch1) the distance from one point on a helix to the corresponding point on the next turn of the helix, measured parallel to the axis; 2) the distance between the two peaks of adjacent corrugation or conv [..]
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PitchThe slope of a roof usually expressed as a ratio.
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PitchThe three Hebrew words so translated all represent the same object, viz., mineral pitch or asphalt in its different aspects. Asphalt is an opaque, inflammable substance which bubbles up from subterran [..]
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Pitch(Gen. 6:14), asphalt or bitumen in its soft state, called "slime" (Gen. 11:3; 14:10; Ex. 2:3), found in pits near the Dead Sea (q.v.). It was used for various purposes, as the coating of the [..]
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PitchGenerally synonymous with the fundamental frequency of a note, but in music, often also taken to imply a perceived measurement that can be affected by overtones above the fundamental.
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PitchDefinition The set of activities intended to persuade someone to buy a product or take a specific course of action.
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Pitch(1) For fixed-pitch (or monospaced) fonts, pitch refers to the number of characters printed per inch. Pitch is one characteristic of a monospaced font. Common pitch values are 10 and 12. In proportion [..]
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PitchPitch is the rate of vibration of the vocal folds.
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Pitchthe subjective trait which allows noises to be arranged in order on a musical scale. The pitch of a pure tone is distinguished mainly by its frequency, the pitch of a complex periodic sound by its bas [..]
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Pitch1. (Rifling) the distance a bullet must travel in the bore to make one revolution.2. (Grips) the angle that the front of the handgun grip makes with the line of sight.3. A component used in making clay targets.4. See Stock Dimensions.
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PitchThis is the distance between perforations along a roll of film. Print Stock has a slightly longer pitch than camera stock.
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PitchPitch is a musical term that refers to the sound quality; highness or lowness (frequency) of a sound or musical tone. All sounds have a measurable frequency, whether they are classified as music, soun [..]
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PitchThe distance between two successive perforations along a strip of film.(Film) The frequency of audible sound (Sound).
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PitchIn flat cable, the nominal distance between the index edges of two adjacent conductors.
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Pitchthe relative highness or lowness of tone of the voice.
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PitchThe musical level at which a person speaks.
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PitchStory idea sent to an editor by a reporter.
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PitchA term frequently used to designate coal tar pitch.
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Pitch A reporter’s idea for a story as presented in outline to an editor.
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PitchA dimension of auditory experience in which sounds vary from low to high.
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76 |
PitchThe property of sound that varies with variation in the frequency of vibration.
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PitchAlso called resin, this sticky substance is a mixture of rosin and turpentine and is found in most softwoods but particularly the pines, spruces and Douglas-fir. Can ooze from the pitch pockets and sometimes the knots for a year or two if not set by kiln-drying. Resin can bleed through finishes and will harden into beads, but this can be cleaned [..]
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PitchHow high or low sound frequencies appear to be.
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PitchA description of the movement of the nose of an aircraft up or down, in relation to its previous altitude.
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PitchSlope, to incline. The inclination of a roof. Usually stated in terms of vertical rise as compared to horizontal coverage, as 1: 12 refers to 1 foot rise for every 12 feet horizontally.
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81 |
PitchTone: A function of frequency.
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82 |
PitchThe distance from any point on a thread to the corresponding point on the adjacent thread. measured parallel to the axis. Also applied to spur gears-. see diametral pitch.
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PitchThe distance from a point on one screw thread to a corresponding point on the next thread.
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PitchPitch is the style of holes your machine punches. Different binding machines have a different pitch. The spacing of the holes your machine punches depending on the pitch.
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Pitchthe nominal distance between centers of repetitive shapes.
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PitchWhen takt time is too short for a reasonable paced withdrawal it can be adjusted upward to a consistent increment of work called pitch, which becomes the basic unit of your production schedule for a p [..]
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PitchStory idea sent to an editor by a reporter.
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PitchStory idea sent to an editor by a reporter.
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PitchRotation in the plane of forward motion, about the left-right axis.
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PitchThe identification of a certain sound with a definite tone; depends on the frequency which the ear receives.
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PitchHow high a musical note is: the higher the frequency of the sound wave, the higher the pitch of the resulting note.
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PitchThe rotation of a car about a horizontal axis, which causes its nose or tail to bob up and down. Dive and squat are pitching motions.
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PitchYour idea for a story, as told to your editor. Basically, a sales pitch. You’ll typically get a “yes” or “no” from an editor depending on how compelling you make your pitch sound. To learn how to successfully pitch an article, check out my guide here.
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PitchA printer’s measure of how wide characters are. 12 pitch means 12 characters to the inch, sometimes called elite pitch. 10 pitch, 10 characters per inch, was the standard for impact printers. biometri [..]
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Pitch Pitch is the relative "highness" or "lowness" of a sound when compared with other notes. It can also indicate an absolute fixed position in a range of musical notes (e.g.
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Pitch(n) the property of sound that varies with variation in the frequency of vibration(n) (baseball) the act of throwing a baseball by a pitcher to a batter(n) a vendor's position (especially on the [..]
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PitchFrequency of sound as perceived by a listener (Lesson 21)
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PitchThe perceptual attribute of a sound which enables the hearer to locate the sound on a scale from high to low. The physical correlate of pitch is the fundamental frequency of the sound. In normal speec [..]
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PitchA reminder that every piece of human creativity can be reduced to an advertisement.
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Pitchan up-or-down movement of the front (bow) of a vessel (ship, glider, etc.).
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PitchSee Setting Angle.
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Pitchrock from end to end (rather than from side to side)
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PitchThe incline slope of a roof or the ratio of the total rise to the total width of a house, i.e., a 6-foot rise and 24-foot width is a one-fourth pitch roof. Roof slope is expressed in the inches of rise, per foot of horizontal run.
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PitchTouch pitch, and you will be defiled. “The finger that touches rouge will be red.” “Evil communications corrupt good manners.” “A rotten apple injures its [..]
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PitchTypical of screws and gears, it describes the numbers of threads or teeth over a given distance. For threads or gears to properly mate, they must have the same pitch.
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PitchThe slope of a pipe line for the purpose of improving drainage.
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Pitch The number of threads per inch or millimeter (Pitch = 1/Lead).
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PitchAngular motion of a ship in the fore-and-aft plane. See also roll, scend.
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PitchA description of the movement of the nose of an aircraft up or down in relation to its previous attitude.
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PitchThe nominal distance between two adjacent thread roots or crests.
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111 |
PitchThe slope of a pipeline for the purpose of improving drainage.
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112 |
PitchThe distance from a point on the screw thread to a corresponding point on the adjacent thread measured parallel to its axis in the same axial plane and on the same side of the axis. The term pitch is [..]
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PitchThe angular motion of a carriage or assembly, designed for linear motion, about an axis perpendicular to the motion direction and perpendicular to the yaw axis. A linear coordinate system is typically defined with an X, Y and Z axis and the corresponding angular axes for these three are pitch, yaw and roll, respectively.
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PitchRotation of a body about its lateral axis.
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Pitch1) The distance from one point on a helix to the corresponding point on the next turn of the helix, measured parallel to the axis. 2) The distance between the two peaks of adjacent corrugation or convolution.
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PitchPitch in music is the note that sounds. On the organ, pitch does not always correspond to the key which plays the pitch. For more information on pitch and organs, see the Pitch Levels
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PitchThe angle of slope of a roof.
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PitchThe slope of a roof usually expressed as a ratio.
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119 |
PitchIs the slope or inclination of a member. It is defined as the ratio of the total rise to the total width. It also is defined as the angle that the top chord makes with the lower chord. There can be single or double pitched members.
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Pitch(1) Of the three axes in flight, this specifies the vertical action, the up-and-down movement. Compare ROLL and YAW. (2) The angle of a propeller or rotor blade in relation to its arc; also the distan [..]
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PitchTo sell or smuggle drugs.
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PitchLeg-room or distance between two seats.
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Pitchthe slope of a pipeline for the purpose of improving drainage.
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PitchUnits: degrees, mrad Maximum rotation around the Y axis as the stage moves in the X direction. Maximum rotation around the Y axis as the stage moves in the X direction. degrees, mrad
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125 |
PitchUnit of length that a helix face shifts per 360º rotation; distance from one point on a thread to the corresponding point on the next thread.
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PitchThe slope of installed piping, usually given as millimetres per meter.
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Pitch1. The musical note played by a piano string, organ pipe, xylophone bar or other tuned instrument or voice; e.g., C, C#, D, etc. 2. The tuning standard or reference used for tuning an instrument; e.g. [..]
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PitchThe angle of a rotor measured in the plane of rotation; Symbols: theta,Theta; Typical Units: rad, deg;
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PitchHow high or low a musical note is
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PitchThe bounce of the ball - "it pitches on a good length". Also, the cut strip in the centre of the field of play.
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131 |
Pitch
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Pitchthe vibration frequency of a tone.
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Pitchthe highness or lowness of a tone, as determined by the frequency of vibrations per second.
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Pitch[0] the predominant frequency
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PitchThe location of a musical sound in the tonal scale, which is determined by the vibration frequency. The present day standard of pitch is a'=435 vibrations (in Europe). The indication of different [..]
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PitchViewed from the side, the change in vehicle angle with respect to the ground. For example, in braking, weight is transferred from the rear to the front, causing unloading of rear springs and additiona [..]
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PitchThe mental sensation of "highness" or "lowness" of a tone; a psychological/musical term denoting the mental correlate of frequency. Although the perception of pitch is purely a psychological phenomenon, pitch is usually expressed by a physical correlate -- frequency (expressed in hertz -- Hz). Psychoacoustic and phenomenological [..]
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PitchThe quality of a sound governed by the rate of vibrations producing it; the musical interpretation of frequency.
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Pitcha continuous frequency over time.
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Pitchsometimes confused with speed or tempo, the pitch of music is actually the frequency of the waveform which enables us to hear music. The pitch of a sound defines it’s note. A high pitch is a high note [..]
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Pitch
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PitchIn the strictest climbing definition, a pitch is considered one rope length (50-60 meters). However, in guide books and route descriptions, a pitch is the portion of a climb between two belay points.
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Pitch(1) A sound at a specific frequency (how fast or slow something is vibrating). A vibration at a certain speed determines how high or low a pitch is. The faster the vibration the higher the pitch, the slower the vibration the lower the pitch.
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PitchThe presentation of an advertising message to a prospective or existing client.
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145 |
PitchThe presentation of an advertising message to a prospective or existing client.
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146 |
PitchAccumulation of resin in the wood cells in a more or less irregular patch.
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147 |
PitchThe highness or lowness of a tone determined by its frequency.
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148 |
PitchThe pitch of a sound is its highness or lowness. A telephone is usually high in pitch whereas a trombone is low in pitch.
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PitchThe perceived quality of a sound that is chiefly a function of its fundamental frequency. In general pitch is regarded as becoming higher with increasing frequency and lower with decreasing frequency.
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150 |
Pitchthe relative highness or lowness of a sound.
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151 |
PitchThe quality of a musical tone that relates to the frequency of the sound. Various muscal traditions and assign names to discreet frequencies of sounds, so that they can be dealt with more easily by mu [..]
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152 |
PitchAn English word referring to the playing field.
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153 |
PitchA concise verbal (and sometimes visual) presentation of an idea for a story, generally made to a media outlet in the hope of attracting positive coverage for a client.
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154 |
Pitch The section of a climb between belay stations.
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155 |
PitchTo verbally describe a property to a potential buyer in the hope it will be bought.
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156 |
Pitcha brief verbal description of a screenplay idea or script (often based on a written logline) usually told by a writer, director, or producer to someone who is interested in buying, financing, or devel [..]
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157 |
PitchA measure which describes the flight angle along one axis, usually measured from level in case of aerial vehicles.
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158 |
PitchThe spacing between consecutive threads on a threaded part.
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159 |
PitchIn relation to movement, it is the angular rotation about the lateral axis, typically the Y-axis for X-Y-Z configurations. In relation to mechanical components, it is the spacing between consecutive t [..]
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160 |
PitchThe position where a bookmaker conducts his business on a racecourse.
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161 |
PitchA vessel's motion, rotating about the beam/transverse axis, causing the fore and aft ends to rise and fall repetitively.
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162 |
PitchDark-coloured solid obtained from distillation of tar. Has a low melting point and is insoluble in water. Used for paying of deck seams and stopping of small leaks.
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163 |
PitchA tar substance obtained from the pine tree and used in paying the seams of a vessel. Motion of vessel.
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164 |
Pitch1. The alternate rise and fall of the bow of a vessel proceeding through waves; 2. The theoretical distance advanced by a propeller in one revolution; 3. Tar and resin used for caulking between the pl [..]
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165 |
PitchA tar substance obtained from the pine tree and used in paying the seams of a vessel. Motion of vessel.
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166 |
PitchA vessel's motion, rotating about the beam/transverse axis, causing the fore and aft ends to rise and fall repetitively.
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167 |
Pitch Vertical rise and fall of a ship's bow cause by head or following seas.
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168 |
PitchA mixture of boiled tar and coarse resin. Also a term for a ship's rotational motion, the rise and fall of the bow and stern.
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169 |
Pitch(1) The alternate rise and fall of the bow of a vessel proceeding through waves; also called hobby horsing (2) The theoretical distance advanced by a propeller in one revolution. (3) Tar and resin use [..]
|
170 |
Pitchthe front-to-back heaving and plunging motion of a ship at sea. On destroyers and other small ships, the whole ship can bang and shudder as the bow pitches in and out of the sea; if you live forward, [..]
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171 |
PitchA vessel's motion, rotating about the beam axis, so the bow pitches up and down.
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172 |
PitchTheoretical definition: The linear distance that the propeller would move in one complete revolution through a solid medium not allowing for slip. Because under actual operating conditions slip occurs [..]
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173 |
Pitch1. The alternate rise and fall of the bow of a vessel proceeding through waves;2. The theoretical distance advanced by a propeller in one revolution;3. Tar and resin used for caulking between the plan [..]
|
174 |
PitchA vessel's motion, rotating about the beam/transverse axis, causing the fore and aft ends to rise and fall repetitively.
|
175 |
PitchA vessel's motion, rotating about the beam/transverse axis, causing the fore and aft ends to rise and fall repetitively.
|
176 |
Pitch(1) Dynamic movement of a ship or aircraft about a transverse axis, i.e. when bow or nose moves up and down. Contrast with TRIM. (2) Aviation. Movement about the transverse or 'x' axis of an [..]
|
177 |
Pitch(1) The alternate rise and fall of the bow of a vessel proceeding through waves; also called hobby horsing (2) The theoretical distance advanced by a propeller in one revolution. (3) Tar and resin use [..]
|
178 |
Pitch1. The alternate rise and fall of the bow of a vessel proceeding through waves; 2. The theoretical distance advanced by a propeller in one revolution; 3. Tar and resin used for caulking between the planks of a wooden vessel.
|
179 |
PitchThe forward and backward strafing motion of the multicopter controlled by the up and down movement of the right control stick on a Mode II transmitter.
|
180 |
Pitchn. A playing field for sports, as in the "Football pitch."
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181 |
Pitchclick here for details of the pitch and its markings
|
182 |
Pitch
|
183 |
PitchA description of the movement of the nose of an aircraft up or down, in relation to its previous altitude.
|
184 |
PitchThe degree of roof incline expressed as the ratio of the rise, in feet, to the span, in feet.
|
185 |
PitchRefers to any changes in the vertical direction that a UAV’s nose is pointing.
|
186 |
PitchThe position of a human voice on the musical scale.
|
187 |
PitchA short high arcing shot that lands on the green and usually stops quickly.
|
188 |
Pitch1. an underhanded throw by the quarterback to the running back who is running out wide. 2. another term for throw, as in “pitch and catch”. 3. a non-American term for the field.
|
189 |
PitchThe soccer field of play.
|
190 |
Pitch1. Oscillation of a vessel about the transverse axis due to the vessel’s bow and stern being raised or lowered on passing through successive crests and troughs of waves. Also called PITCHING. See also [..]
|
191 |
PitchSee PITCH, definition 1.
|
192 |
PitchThe angle of the airplane's longitudinal axis relative to horizontal
|
193 |
PitchOf the three axes in flight, this specifies the vertical action, the up-and-down movement.
|
194 |
PitchThe story you give your wife about needing an airplane to use in your business.
|
195 |
PitchThe movement of a plane in the vertical and longitudial axes.
|
196 |
PitchThe angle of a rotor measured in the plane of rotation; Symbols: theta,Theta; Typical Units: rad, deg;
|
197 |
PitchRotation of an aircraft about a horizontal axis perpendicular to the direction of flight (nose-up / nose-down), controlled by the elevator.
|
198 |
PitchThe angle of incidence at which a propeller blade or rotor blade is set.
|
199 |
PitchA colloquial term for discard.
|
200 |
PitchAlso known as a sacrifice
|
201 |
Pitchthe throw made by a pitcher to the hitter.
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202 |
Pitchthe lovely green turf, where soccer should be played
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203 |
Pitchthe pitch and its markings
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204 |
PitchSee field of play.
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205 |
PitchA short lofted shot played in and around the green area designed to get the ball up quickly and to stop abruptly on landing top
|
206 |
PitchA long underhanded toss, usually using both hands, from the quarterback to a running back on running plays.
|
207 |
Pitch(1) (noun) (slang) discard
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208 |
PitchThe throw to the batter.
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209 |
PitchThe playback speed of the sound or motion object.
|
210 |
PitchThe motion of a vehicle in which the front moves up and down relative to the static position.
|
211 |
PitchPitch is a residue from the distillation of tars, which is liquid when hot and almost solid when cold.
|
212 |
PitchThe angle/slope of a roof. Generally 25 degrees.
|
213 |
PitchThe rotation of a vehicle about its lateral (Y) axis, i.e. movement in elevation.
|
214 |
PitchThe distance between a plane seat and the seat in front. The higher the figure, the more leg space the traveller will have.
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Pitchthe forward and backward movement of the ship as it moves
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PitchA section of a rapid steeper than the Surrounding portions; a drop.
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PitchAngular motion of a carriage around an axis perpendicular to the motion direction and perpendicular to the yaw axis.
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PitchPitch is the spac ebetween the centre of one BGA (ball grid assembly) to the centre of the next one.
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PitchThe center-to-center spacing between conductors, such as pads and pins, on a PCB.
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PitchHow high or low a tone sounds to a person. High frequency sound has a high pitch or tone (treble notes), but low frequency has a low/deep pitch or tone (bass notes). High sounds are usually above 2000 [..]
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Pitcha type of communication that requests the assignment of work; can be used as both noun and verb, as in, to send this type of communication; used in journalism for the proposal of an article idea to an [..]
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Pitchsee Seat Pitch
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Pitcha measure of how high or low a sound is perceived to be, depending on the frequency of the sound wave
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PitchDownward slope of a drain pipe in the direction of the water flow, also known as the “fall” of the pipe.
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PitchResinous material (usually dark) which originates from the wood and / or internal sizing resins.
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PitchA sudden drop in, or steeper section of, a set of rapids.
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PitchAn English word referring to the playing field.
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PitchThe position where a bookmaker conducts his business on a racecourse.
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Pitch1) The perception of frequency by the ear (a higher or lower quality of music). 2) A control on a tape transport which adjusts the speed slightly up or down, changing the pitch and time of the music. [..]
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PitchThe distance between terminals on an IC package. A term used to describe the frequency of a sound heard by the human ear.
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PitchOf roofs, the angle of the rafters from the horizontal. Traditionally the pitch was expressed as the number of vertical inches corresponding to twelve horizontal inches, thus a 45 degree roof was desc [..]
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PitchPitch is the slope of a member defined as the ratio of the total rise to the total width
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PitchThe center-to-center distance between adjacent leads on a device or package.
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PitchA section of a climb, or the whole thing. Some climbing is "single-pitch", and some is "multi-pitch". Both versions require a good belay at the top; multi-pitch routes require good [..]
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PitchRotation of the end-effector in a vertical plane around the end of the robot manipulator arm. See Roll, and Yaw.
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PitchPitch is a perceptual property of sounds that allows their ordering on a frequency-related scale,
or more commonly, pitch is the quality that makes it possible to judge sounds as "higher" and "lower" [..]
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PitchPitch is a perceptual property of sounds that allows their ordering on a frequency-related scale,
or more commonly, pitch is the quality that makes it possible to judge sounds as "higher" and "lower" [..]
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PitchPitch may refer to:
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PitchPitch is a perceptual property of sounds that allows their ordering on a frequency-related scale,
or more commonly, pitch is the quality that makes it possible to judge sounds as "higher" and "lower" [..]
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PitchPitch is a perceptual property of sounds that allows their ordering on a frequency-related scale,
or more commonly, pitch is the quality that makes it possible to judge sounds as "higher" and "lower" [..]
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PitchPitch is a name for any of a number of viscoelastic polymers. Pitch can be natural or manufactured, derived from petroleum, coal tar, or plants. Various forms of pitch may also be called tar, bitumen, [..]
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PitchIn baseball, a pitch is the act of throwing a baseball toward home plate to start a play. The term comes from the Knickerbocker Rules. Originally, the ball had to be literally "pitched" underhand, as [..]
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PitchIn rock climbing and ice climbing, a pitch is a steep section of a route that requires a rope between two belays, as part of a climbing system. Standard climbing ropes are between 50 and 80 metres lon [..]
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PitchA pitch is a concise verbal (and sometimes visual) presentation of an idea for a film or TV series generally made by a screenwriter or film director to a film producer or studio executive in the hope [..]
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PitchPitch (or "High Low Jack") is an American trick-taking card game derived from the English game of All Fours (Seven Up). Historically, Pitch started as "Blind All Fours", a very simple All Fours varian [..]
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PitchA pitch or a sports ground is an outdoor playing area for various sports. The term pitch is most commonly used in British English, while the comparable term in American and Canadian English is playin [..]
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PitchPitch is a 1997 Canadian documentary created by Kenny Hotz and Spencer Rice, featuring themselves as two young filmmakers attending the Toronto International Film Festival to pitch a film concept to v [..]
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PitchPitch is a perceptual property of sounds that allows their ordering on a frequency-related scale,
or more commonly, pitch is the quality that makes it possible to judge sounds as "higher" and "lower" [..]
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PitchPitch is the number of characters and spaces in one inch (2.5 cm) of running text, that is, characters per inch (abbreviated cpi). The pitch is most often used as a measurement of font size of typewri [..]
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PitchPitch is an American drama television series that aired on Fox from September 22 to December 8, 2016. The series was commissioned on May 10, 2016.On May 1, 2017, the series was canceled after one seas [..]
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