different between pinchy vs pitchy

pinchy

English

Etymology

pinch +? -y

Adjective

pinchy (comparative pinchier, superlative pinchiest)

  1. (informal) slightly painful, akin to being pinched
    • 1993, Milly Bennett, A. Tom Grunfeld - On Her Own: Journalistic Adventures from San Francisco to the Chinese Revolution, 1917-1927
      I pushed my cropped hair up and away from the back of my neck where it was pinchy and itching.
    • July 1998, Indianapolis Monthly Vol. 21, No. 13
      It's a rare treat in these days when anyone can truck in a case of trendy flavors, set out a few pinchy wire chairs and call the whole sterile spread an ice cream parlor.
    • 2002, Mary Pope Osborne - Adaline Falling Star
      I can't keep still. I feel like I'm caught in a trap — my tight corset and pinchy shoes don't help.
  2. (informal) prone or designed to pinch
    • 2009, Mark Teague - Doom Machine
      “I don't understand this whatchamacallit. The way it wraps all the way around. Wouldn't it be simpler if it went straight up? Hey, hand me that pinchy thing with the zapper on one end.
    • 2009, Andy Rash - Are You a Horse?
      A skittery, pinchy thing ran sideways in front of Roy. It had plenty of legs. “Are you a horse?” he asked. “A horse? I'll pinch you good! A horse is friendly. I'm a crab!” said the crab.

Derived terms

  • pinchily

Anagrams

  • hypnic

pinchy From the web:

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pitchy

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?p?t?i/
  • Rhymes: -?t?i

Etymology 1

From Middle English pycchy, pychy, equivalent to pitch +? -y.

Adjective

pitchy (comparative pitchier, superlative pitchiest)

  1. Of, pertaining to, or resembling pitch.
  2. Very dark black; pitch-black.
    • 1843, Thomas Carlyle, Past and Present, book 2, ch. 5, Twelfth Century
      Mancunium, Manceaster, what we now call Manchester, spins no cotton […] The Creek of the Mersey gurgles, twice in the four-and-twenty hours, with eddying brine, clangorous with sea-fowl; and is a Lither-Pool, a lazy or sullen Pool, no monstrous pitchy City, and Seahaven of the world!

Etymology 2

From pitch +? -y. (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Adjective

pitchy (comparative pitchier, superlative pitchiest)

  1. (music) Off pitch; out of tune.

Anagrams

  • phytic

pitchy From the web:

  • what pitcher has the most strikeouts
  • what pitcher has the most home runs
  • what pitcher has the most no hitters
  • what pitch is this
  • what pitch prop do i need
  • what pitcher has the most wins
  • what pitches does gerrit cole throw
  • what pitchers are cheating
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