| 1. | to erect or set up (a tent, camp, or the like). |
| 2. | to put, set, or plant in a fixed or definite place or position. |
| 3. | to throw, fling, hurl, or toss. |
| 4. | Baseball.
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| 5. | to set at a certain point, degree, level, etc.: He pitched his hopes too high. |
| 6. | Music. to set at a particular pitch, or determine the key or keynote of (a melody). |
| 7. | Cards.
|
| 8. | to pave or revet with small stones. |
| 9. | Masonry.
|
| 10. | Informal. to attempt to sell or win approval for; promote; advertise: to pitch breakfast foods at a sales convention. |
| 11. | Informal. to approach or court (as a person, company, or the public) in hope of a sale, approval, or interest; make an appeal to. |
| 12. | to cause to pitch. |
| 13. | Obsolete. to set in order; to arrange, as a field of battle. |
| 14. | Obsolete. to fix firmly as in the ground; embed. |
| 15. | to plunge or fall forward or headlong. |
| 16. | to lurch. |
| 17. | to throw or toss. |
| 18. | Baseball.
|
| 19. | to slope downward; dip. |
| 20. | to plunge with alternate fall and rise of bow and stern, as a ship (opposed to roll ). |
| 21. | (of a rocket or guided missile) to deviate from a stable flight attitude by oscillations of the longitudinal axis in a vertical plane about the center of gravity. |
| 22. | to fix a tent or temporary habitation; encamp: They pitched by a mountain stream. |
| 23. | Golf. to play a pitch shot. |
| 24. | Informal. to attempt to sell or win approval for something or someone by advertising, promotion, etc.: politicians pitching on TV. |
| 25. | Rare. to become established; settle down. |
| 26. | relative point, position, or degree: a high pitch of excitement. |
| 27. | the degree of inclination or slope; angle: the pitch of an arch; the pitch of a stair. |
| 28. | the highest point or greatest height: enjoying the pitch of success. |
| 29. | (in music, speech, etc.) the degree of height or depth of a tone or of sound, depending upon the relative rapidity of the vibrations by which it is produced. |
| 30. | Music. the particular tonal standard with which given tones may be compared in respect to their relative level. |
| 31. | Acoustics. the apparent predominant frequency sounded by an acoustical source. |
| 32. | act or manner of pitching. |
| 33. | a throw or toss. |
| 34. | Baseball. the serving of the ball to the batter by the pitcher, usually preceded by a windup or stretch. |
| 35. | a pitching movement or forward plunge, as of a ship. |
| 36. | upward or downward inclination or slope: a road descending at a steep pitch. |
| 37. | a sloping part or place: to build on the pitch of a hill. |
| 38. | a quantity of something pitched or placed somewhere. |
| 39. | Cricket. the central part of the field; the area between the wickets. |
| 40. | Informal.
|
| 41. | the specific location in which a person or object is placed or stationed; allotted or assigned place. |
| 42. | Chiefly British. the established location, often a street corner, of a beggar, street peddler, newspaper vendor, etc. |
| 43. | Aeronautics.
|
| 44. | (of a rocket or guided missile)
|
| 45. | Also called plunge. Geology. the inclination of a linear feature, as the axis of a fold or an oreshoot, from the horizontal. |
| 46. | Machinery.
|
| 47. | (in carpet weaving) the weftwise number of warp ends, usually determined in relation to 27 inches (68.6 cm). |
| 48. | Cards.
|
| 49. | Masonry. a true or even surface on a stone. |
| 50. | (of typewriter type) a unit of measurement indicating the number of characters to a horizontal inch: Pica is a 10-pitch type. |
| 51. | pitch in, Informal.
|
| 52. | pitch into, Informal.
|
| 53. | pitch on or upon, to choose, esp. casually or without forethought; decide on: We pitched on a day for our picnic. |
pitch 2 (pĭch) v. pitched, pitch·ing, pitch·es v. tr.
pitch in Informal
pitch on/upon Informal To succeed in choosing or achieving, usually quickly: pitched on the ideal solution. [Middle English pichen, probably from Old English *piccean, causative of *pīcian, to prick.] |
pitch (pĭch) Pronunciation Key
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pitch on
Also, pitch upon. Choose, decide on, as in He pitched on the ideal solution. This idiom uses pitch in the sense of "arrange or set something in order." [Early 1600s]