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  • For other uses of the word "Pitcher," see Pitcher (disambiguation) Pitchers are containers with a spout for pouring their contents.

    It is said that the term arose from the use of a long spouted container to pour hot pitch when caulking the seams between planks in sailing vessels.

    Pitch was traditionally used to help caulk the seams of wooden sailing vessels. It was heated, then put into a container with a very long spout. The word pitcher is said to derive from this long spouted container used to pour hot pitch. Several phrases in popular use today date to this maritime usage. The term the devil to pay is said to derive from this usage. The full phrase was "the devil to pay, and no pitch hot". The "devil" in question being the most outward plank, the most difficult one to caulk.

    An ewer is a pitcher, often decorated, with a base, oval body, and flaring spout. A famous example is the America's Cup trophy.

    The traps present in insectivorous plants of the genus Nepenthes are also often referred to as pitchers.

    Containers

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Pitcher (container)".

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