Definition
Flight conditions in which the aircraft's pitch attitude is higher than normal cruise pitch, indicated by the miniature aircraft on the attitude indicator being above the artificial horizon, a decreasing airspeed, and an increasing altitude. If allowed to continue, a nose-high attitude can lead to an aerodynamic stall.
Plain English
The nose of the aircraft is pointed up more steeply than it should be. The plane is climbing, slowing down, and getting closer to the point where the wings stop producing enough lift to keep flying.
Context Anchor
Used in instrument flying and unusual-attitude recovery training, especially when the pilot must recognize the airplane’s position by instruments instead of by looking outside.
Derivation
“Attitude” in aviation means the position of the aircraft compared with the horizon. “Nose-high” describes the aircraft’s nose being above the normal flying position. Together, the phrase means the airplane is oriented with its nose too far upward.
Why Pilots Care
Unrecognized nose-high attitudes in instrument conditions quickly lead to stalls or spins with little altitude margin for recovery.
Grounding Statement
Picture the airplane climbing too steeply: the nose is up, speed is bleeding off, and the pilot must correct the attitude before control becomes harder.
Intuition Check
“Attitude” does not mean the pilot’s mood here. It means the airplane’s position compared with the horizon; “nose-high” means the nose is higher than it should be for the situation.
Example Sentence 1
When the instructor covered the outside view, the student recognized the nose-high attitude on the attitude indicator and immediately applied full power and lowered the pitch.
Example Sentence 2
During the recovery sequence, nose-high attitudes required immediate recognition to prevent an inadvertent stall.