Pitch - définition. Qu'est-ce que Pitch
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Pitch - définition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Pitches; Pitched; Pitching; Pitch (disambiguation); Pitching (disambiguation)

pitch         
(pitches, pitching, pitched)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
A pitch is an area of ground that is marked out and used for playing a game such as football, cricket, or hockey. (mainly BRIT; in AM, usually use field
)
There was a swimming-pool, cricket pitches, playing fields...
Their conduct both on and off the pitch was excellent.
N-COUNT: oft n N
2.
If you pitch something somewhere, you throw it with quite a lot of force, usually aiming it carefully.
Simon pitched the empty bottle into the lake.
VERB: V n prep
3.
To pitch somewhere means to fall forwards suddenly and with a lot of force.
The movement took him by surprise, and he pitched forward...
I was pitched into the water and swam ashore.
VERB: V adv, be V-ed prep/adv
4.
If someone is pitched into a new situation, they are suddenly forced into it.
They were being pitched into a new adventure...
This could pitch the government into confrontation with the work-force.
VERB: be V-ed prep, V n prep
5.
In the game of baseball or rounders, when you pitch the ball, you throw it to the batter for them to hit it.
We passed long, hot afternoons pitching a baseball.
VERB: V n
pitching
His pitching was a legend among major league hitters.
N-UNCOUNT
6.
The pitch of a sound is how high or low it is.
He raised his voice to an even higher pitch.
N-UNCOUNT
see also perfect pitch
7.
If a sound is pitched at a particular level, it is produced at the level indicated.
His cry is pitched at a level that makes it impossible to ignore...
Her voice was well pitched and brisk.
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed prep/adv, V-ed
8.
If something is pitched at a particular level or degree of difficulty, it is set at that level.
I think the material is pitched at too high a level for our purposes...
The government has pitched High Street interest rates at a new level.
VERB: be V-ed prep, V n prep
9.
If something such as a feeling or a situation rises to a high pitch, it rises to a high level.
Tension has reached such a pitch that the armed forces say soldiers may have to use their weapons to defend themselves against local people.
N-SING: usu with supp
see also fever pitch
10.
If you pitch your tent, or pitch camp, you put up your tent in a place where you are going to stay.
He had pitched his tent in the yard...
At dusk we pitched camp in the middle of nowhere.
VERB: V n, V n
11.
If a boat pitches, it moves violently up and down with the movement of the waves when the sea is rough.
The ship is pitching and rolling in what looks like about fifteen foot seas.
VERB: V
12.
see also pitched
13.
If someone makes a pitch for something, they try to persuade people to do or buy it.
The President speaks in New York today, making another pitch for his economic program...
PHRASE: V inflects, oft PHR for n
see also sales pitch
pitch         
I
n.
high-pressure sales talk
(colloq.)
1) to deliver a pitch
2) a sales pitch
blade angle
3) a propeller pitch
4) reverse pitch
intensity
5) a fever; high; low pitch (to reach a fever pitch)
throw of a baseball
(esp. AE)
6) to throw a pitch
7) an underhand; wild pitch (to uncork a wild pitch)
II
v.
1)(A) ('to throw') pitch the ball to me; or: pitch me the ball
2) (d; intr.) to pitch into ('to begin to work together enthusiastically') (let's all pitch into this job)
pitch         
I. n.
1.
Degree of elevation.
2.
Degree, measure, extent, range, rate.
3.
Height, loftiness, highest rise.
4.
Size, stature.
5.
Declivity, descent, slope, inclination.
6.
Degree of slope, degree of inclination.
7.
Throw, toss, cast, jerk.
8.
(Mus.) Relative height.
II. v. a.
1.
Throw, cast, fling, hurl, toss, launch, send, dart, lance, jaculate.
2.
Set (as a tent), fix, plant, place, station, locate, settle, establish.
3.
Set, fix (as price).
III. v. n.
1.
Fall, plunge, fall headlong.
2.
Light, settle, rest.
3.
Encamp.
4.
(Naut.) Rise and fall.

Wikipédia

Pitch
Exemples du corpus de texte pour Pitch
1. Dravid wasn‘t enamoured by the cracks on the pitch to think of playing two spinners at the Wanderers‘ pitch.
2. "The pitch is basically unplayable," said Staerk.
3. Mr Parkin said: "If you have got a voice where you change the pitch, you raise the pitch, you lower the pitch, then clearly teaching and children‘s learning is more effective.
4. Anger on the pitch: Parents are concerned children may be influenced by foul and abusive behaviour on the pitch (file picture of an angry David Beckham on the pitch) Amateur footballers will face an instant red card for swearing as part of a zero tolerance approach to foul language on the pitch.
5. But they also want to know where the feds were before Bonds packed baseball stadiums and crushed pitch after pitch to become baseball‘s home run king.