Pitchy vs Swart - What's the difference?
pitchy | swart | Related terms |
Of, pertaining to, or resembling pitch.
Very dark black; pitch-black.
*1843 , '', book 2, ch. 5, ''Twelfth Century
(music) Off pitch; out of tune.
Of a dark hue; moderately black; swarthy; tawny.
* 1400s:' , ''Hymns to the Virgin'' - Men schalle then sone se / Att mydday hytt shalle ' swarte be
* 1590', , ''The Faerie Queene'', Book 2 - A nation strange, with visage ' swart
* , III-i - Lame, foolish, crooked, swart , prodigious,
* 1819 , , Otho the Great , Act II, Scene I, verses 91-92
* 1836', , ''Old Ticonderoga'' - The merry soldiers footing it with the ' swart savage maids
Black.
(obsolete) Gloomy; malignant.
* 1906', , ''Time and the Gods'' - Suddenly the ' swart figure of Time stood up before the gods, with both hands dripping with blood and a red sword dangling idly from his fingers, and said: “Sardathrion is gone! I have overthrown it!”
To make swart or tawny; as, to swart a living part; blacken; tan.
* 1646', , ''Pseudodoxia Epidemica'' - the heate of the Sun, whose fervor may ' swarte a living part, and even black a dead or dissolving flesh,
* 1587: Raphael Holinshed, Holinshed's Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland [http://www.archive.org/stream/holinshedschroni01holi#page/356/mode/1up]
Pitchy is a related term of swart.
As adjectives the difference between pitchy and swart
is that pitchy is of, pertaining to, or resembling pitch while swart is of a dark hue; moderately black; swarthy; tawny.As a noun swart is
black or dark dyestuff; something of a certain swart; something of a certain ocker or swart can be .As a verb swart is
to make swart or tawny; as, to swart a living part; blacken; tan.pitchy
English
Adjective
(er)- 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!
swart
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) swart, from (etyl) . Compare (l), (l).Adjective
(er)- I'll choose a gaoler, whose swart monstrous face
- Shall be a hell to look upon […]
- (Milton)
Derived terms
* swarten * Swart star, (Rare): the Dog Star -- so called from its appearing during the hot weather of summer, which makes swart the countenance. * swarthy (< swarty)Etymology 2
From (etyl) swarten, from (etyl) .Verb
(en verb)Etymology 3
Variant of sward.Noun
(-)- Howbeit where the rocks and quarrie grounds are, I take the swart of the earth to be so thin, that no tree of anie greatnesse, other than shrubs and bushes, is able to grow or prosper long therein for want of sufficient moisture wherewith to feed them with fresh humour, or at the leastwise of mould...