pitch
How to Use Pitch
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishA very flexible word: a sales presentation, throwing something, a sports field (British English), musical highness/lowness, setting up a tent, or sticky black tar.
British English uses "pitch" for a football/rugby/cricket field where American English usually says "field".
Word Forms
pitcher comparative, pitched past tense, pight past tense, pitched past tense, pitched past tense, pitches plural, pitches plural, pitches plural, pitches singular, pitches singular, pitches singular, pitchest superlative
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
The startup gave a five-minute _____ to investors.
Etymology
From Old English pic ("tar, pitch"), from Latin pix, related to Greek pissa. The sense of throwing or setting up developed separately in Middle English, and "pitch-black" (from the tar) later gave rise to the adjective meaning "very dark".