Definition
A flight attitude in which the airplane's nose is pitched above the horizon, so the longitudinal axis points upward relative to level flight.
Plain English
The airplane is pointing upward — the nose is tilted up above the horizon line you'd see straight ahead.
Context Anchor
Used when describing airplane control and performance, especially during maneuvers such as a chandelle, takeoff, climb, slow flight, and landing flare.
Derivation
“Nose” means the front of the airplane, and “high” means raised. “Attitude” originally carried the idea of posture or position; in aviation, it means the airplane’s position relative to the horizon, not someone’s mood.
Why Pilots Care
The correct nose-high attitude during a chandelle produces the required altitude gain while keeping airspeed above stall speed.
Intuition Check
Do not read “attitude” as a person’s mood here. In aviation, attitude means how the airplane is positioned relative to the horizon.
Example Sentence 1
As the chandelle progresses through the first 90 degrees of turn, the pilot continues to increase pitch until reaching the maximum nose-high attitude.
Example Sentence 2
The nose-high attitude is gradually reduced as the turn continues to maintain coordinated flight.