Definition
A pitch attitude during the takeoff roll in which the airplane is held at a slightly nose-low or near-level angle so that the wings produce minimum induced drag while the airplane accelerates to liftoff speed. This attitude allows the airplane to gain speed efficiently before the pilot rotates to the takeoff pitch attitude.
Plain English
The airplane is held in a pitch position that lets it speed up quickly along the runway, without the nose being raised so high that the wings start dragging air and slowing things down.
Context Anchor
Used during the takeoff roll, especially when controlling pitch as the airplane accelerates along the runway before liftoff.
Derivation
Drag' here refers to the aerodynamic force that resists the airplane's motion through the air. A 'low-drag' attitude is simply one that keeps that resistance small while the airplane is accelerating.
Why Pilots Care
It shortens the runway distance needed to reach rotation speed and avoids the extra drag or tail-strike risk that comes from rotating too early.
Intuition Check
Low-drag does not mean no drag. It means using a pitch attitude that avoids making extra drag while the airplane is trying to accelerate.
Example Sentence 1
After applying full power, the pilot let the airplane settle into a low-drag attitude and allowed it to accelerate before rotating for liftoff.
Example Sentence 2
A slightly lower low-drag attitude helped the jet accelerate through gusty wind before rotating.