pitch1

[pich] /pɪtʃ/
verb (used with object)
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.
  1. to deliver or serve (the ball) to the batter.
  2. to fill the position of pitcher in (a game):
    He pitched a no-hitter. He pitched a good game.
  3. to choose or assign as a pitcher for a game:
    The manager pitched Greene the next night.
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.
  1. to lead (a card of a particular suit), thereby fixing that suit as trump.
  2. to determine (the trump) in this manner.
8.
to pave or revet with small stones.
9.
Masonry.
  1. to square (a stone), cutting the arrises true with a chisel.
  2. to cut with a chisel.
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.
verb (used without object)
15.
to plunge or fall forward or headlong.
16.
to lurch.
17.
to throw or toss.
18.
Baseball.
  1. to deliver or serve the ball to the batter.
  2. to fill the position of pitcher:
    He pitched for the Mets last year.
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.
noun
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.
  1. a high-pressure sales talk:
    The salesman made his pitch for the new line of dresses.
  2. a specific plan of action; angle:
    to tackle a problem again, using a new pitch.
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.
  1. the nosing of an airplane or spacecraft up or down about a transverse axis.
  2. the distance that a given propeller would advance in one revolution.
44.
  1. the motion due to pitching.
  2. the extent of the rotation of the longitudinal axis involved in pitching.
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.
  1. the distance between the corresponding surfaces of two adjacent gear teeth measured either along the pitch circle (circular pitch) or between perpendiculars to the root surfaces (normal pitch)
  2. the ratio of the number of teeth in a gear or splined shaft to the pitch circle diameter, expressed in inches.
  3. the distance between any two adjacent things in a series, as screw threads, rivets, etc.
47.
(in carpet weaving) the weftwise number of warp ends, usually determined in relation to 27 inches (68.6 cm).
48.
Cards.
  1. all fours (def 2).
  2. auction pitch.
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.
Verb phrases
51.
pitch in, Informal.
  1. to begin to work in earnest and vigorously:
    If I really pitch in, I may be able to finish the paper before the deadline.
  2. to contribute to a common cause; join in:
    When they took up a collection for the annual dinner, he promised to pitch in.
52.
pitch into, Informal.
  1. to attack verbally or physically:
    He apologized for pitching into me yesterday.
  2. to begin to work on vigorously.
53.
pitch on/upon, to choose, especially casually or without forethought; decide on:
We pitched on a day for our picnic.
Origin
1175-1225; (v.) Middle English picchen to thrust, pierce, set, set up (a tent, etc.), array, throw; perhaps akin to pick1; (noun) derivative of the v.
Related forms
pitchable, adjective
Synonyms
3. See throw.
British Dictionary definitions for pitch into

pitch into

verb (intransitive, preposition) (informal)
1.
to assail physically or verbally
2.
to get on with doing (something)

pitch1

/pɪtʃ/
verb
1.
to hurl or throw (something); cast; fling
2.
(usually transitive) to set up (a camp, tent, etc)
3.
(transitive) to place or thrust (a stake, spear, etc) into the ground
4.
(intransitive) to move vigorously or irregularly to and fro or up and down
5.
(transitive) to aim or fix (something) at a particular level, position, style, etc: if you advertise privately you may pitch the price too low
6.
(transitive) to aim to sell (a product) to a specified market or on a specified basis
7.
(intransitive) to slope downwards
8.
(intransitive) to fall forwards or downwards
9.
(intransitive) (of a vessel) to dip and raise its bow and stern alternately
10.
(cricket) to bowl (a ball) so that it bounces on a certain part of the wicket, or (of a ball) to bounce on a certain part of the wicket
11.
(intransitive) (of a missile, aircraft, etc) to deviate from a stable flight attitude by movement of the longitudinal axis about the lateral axis Compare yaw (sense 1), roll (sense 14)
12.
(transitive) (in golf) to hit (a ball) steeply into the air, esp with backspin to minimize roll
13.
(transitive) (music)
  1. to sing or play accurately (a note, interval, etc)
  2. (usually passive) (of a wind instrument) to specify or indicate its basic key or harmonic series by its size, manufacture, etc
14.
(transitive) (cards) to lead (a suit) and so determine trumps for that trick
15.
(baseball)
  1. (transitive) to throw (a baseball) to a batter
  2. (intransitive) to act as pitcher in a baseball game
16.
(Southwest English, dialect) used with it as subject. to snow without the settled snow melting
17.
(US & Canadian, informal) in there pitching, taking part with enthusiasm
18.
pitch a tale, pitch a yarn, to tell a story, usually of a fantastic nature
noun
19.
the degree of elevation or depression
20.
  1. the angle of descent of a downward slope
  2. such a slope
21.
the extreme height or depth
22.
(mountaineering) a section of a route between two belay points, sometimes equal to the full length of the rope but often shorter
23.
the degree of slope of a roof, esp when expressed as a ratio of height to span
24.
the distance between corresponding points on adjacent members of a body of regular form, esp the distance between teeth on a gearwheel or between threads on a screw thread
25.
the distance between regularly spaced objects such as rivets, bolts, etc
26.
the pitching motion of a ship, missile, etc
27.
  1. the distance a propeller advances in one revolution, assuming no slip
  2. the blade angle of a propeller or rotor
28.
the distance between the back rest of a seat in a passenger aircraft and the back of the seat in front of it
29.
(music)
  1. the auditory property of a note that is conditioned by its frequency relative to other notes: high pitch, low pitch
  2. an absolute frequency assigned to a specific note, fixing the relative frequencies of all other notes. The fundamental frequencies of the notes A–G, in accordance with the frequency A = 440 hertz, were internationally standardized and accepted in 1939 See also concert pitch (sense 1), international pitch
30.
(cricket) the rectangular area between the stumps, 22 yards long and 10 feet wide; the wicket
31.
(geology) the inclination of the axis of an anticline or syncline or of a stratum or vein from the horizontal
32.
another name for seven-up
33.
the act or manner of pitching a ball, as in cricket
34.
(mainly Brit) a vendor's station, esp on a pavement
35.
(slang) a persuasive sales talk, esp one routinely repeated
36.
(mainly Brit) (in many sports) the field of play
37.
(golf) Also called pitch shot. an approach shot in which the ball is struck in a high arc
38.
(US & Canadian, slang) make a pitch for
  1. to give verbal support to
  2. to attempt to attract (someone) sexually or romantically
39.
(Brit, informal) queer someone's pitch, to upset someone's plans
Word Origin
C13 picchen; possibly related to pick1

pitch2

/pɪtʃ/
noun
1.
any of various heavy dark viscid substances obtained as a residue from the distillation of tars See also coal-tar pitch
2.
any of various similar substances, such as asphalt, occurring as natural deposits
3.
any of various similar substances obtained by distilling certain organic substances so that they are incompletely carbonized
4.
crude turpentine obtained as sap from pine trees related adjective piceous
verb
5.
(transitive) to apply pitch to (something)
Word Origin
Old English pic, from Latin pix
Word Origin and History for pitch into

pitch

v.

c.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 pitch a tent (late 13c.), is from notion of "driving in" the pegs. Meaning to incline forward and downward" is from 1510s. Meaning "throw (a ball)" evolved late 14c. from that of "hit the mark." Musical sense is from 1670s. Of ships, "to plunge" in the waves, 1620s. To pitch in "work vigorously" is from 1847, perhaps from farm labor. Related: Pitched; pitching.

"to cover with pitch," Old English pician, from the source of pitch (n.2).

n.

1520s, "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 "slope, degree, inclination" is from 1540s; musical sense is from 1590s; but the connection of these is obscure. Sales pitch in the modern commercial advertising sense is from 1943, American English, perhaps from the baseball sense.

"resinous substance, wood tar," late 12c., pich, from Old English pic "pitch," from a Germanic borrowing (cf. Old Saxon and Old Frisian pik, Middle Dutch pik, Dutch pek, Old High German pek, German Pech, Old Norse bik) from Latin pix (genitive picis) "pitch," from PIE root *pi- "sap, juice" (cf. Greek pissa, Lithuanian pikis, Old Church Slavonic piklu "pitch;" see pine (n.)). Applied to pine resins from late 14c. Pitch-black is attested from 1590s; pitch-dark from 1680s.

pitch into in Science
pitch
  (pĭch)   
  1. A thick, tarlike substance obtained by distilling coal tar, used for roofing, waterproofing, and paving.

  2. Any of various natural bitumens, such as asphalt, having similar uses.

  3. A resin derived from the sap of a cone-bearing tree, such as a pine.


Slang definitions & phrases for pitch into

pitch into

verb phrase

To attack; assail forcibly (1829+)


pitch

noun
  1. A hawker's or street vendor's place of business; High Pitch, Low Pitch (1849+)
  2. The sales talk or spiel of a hawker: He recited a part of his pitch/ other gifts to prospective brides, along with a pitch to honeymoon at Holiday Inns (1876+)
  3. Asexual approach, esp a tentative one; pass: Inever made apitch with Herta (1930s+)
verb
  1. : Louie pitches kitchen gadgets/ He pitches household items like the Magic Towel
  2. : I wouldn't try to pitch to that Ice Maiden
  3. To penetrate the anus in sex (1970s+ Homosexuals)
Related Terms

butterfly ball, in there pitching, make a pitch, throw


pitch into in the Bible

(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 outside of vessels and in building. Allusion is made in Isa. 34:9 to its inflammable character. (See SLIME.)

Idioms and Phrases with pitch into

pitch into

Attack, assault, either physically or verbally. For example, Aunt Sally pitched into Uncle Rob when he forgot to go to the bank. [ ; first half of 1800s ]