Incline, slope, or pitch. Applied especially to the incline of the roof, yane kōbai 屋根勾配, in traditional Japanese architecture. The roof pitch is determined by using the foundation as the base angle, i.e., the horizontal line. Then a right angle is formed by erecting an imaginary perpendicular, chūkō kōbai 中鈎勾配. The measurements of the resulting right-angled triangle are used to determine the degree of pitch. For example: a) the pitch expressed as the angle between the hypotenuse and the base line is called kakudo kōbai 角度勾配; b) the pitch expressed as the vertical measure divided by the horizontal measure (i.e. the tan of the angle in (a) above) is called bunsū kōbai 分数勾配. For example, in figure 1, the bunsū kōbai is a/b, or tana. c) the pitch expressed as the ratio of the vertical measure against the horizontal, when the vertical is expressed in sun 寸 and the horizontal is taken as one shaku 尺, equivalent to 10 sun. This is called sunkōbai 寸勾配 or sunpōkōbai 寸法勾配. For example, in figure 2, the incline is expressed as 4 sunkōbai. d) A 45 degree slope is known as *kanekōbai 矩勾配. e) the pitch expressed as the ratio of the vertical measure against the hypotenuse, when the vertical is expressed in sun 寸 and the hypotenuse is taken as one shaku. This is called *hirakōbai 平勾配. For example, in figure 3, the incline is expressed as 3 hirakōbai. f) Very steep inclines of more than 45 degrees are called kaeshikōbai 返し勾配 or norikōbai 乗り勾配. This is measure in one of two ways: (i) The angle in excess of 45 degrees is considered to be the kaeshikōbai. In figure 4, 45 degrees are subtracted, and a new right-angled triangle is drawn as shown. The pitch is then calculated as described in (e) above; in this case the kaeshikōbai is 3 sun because the hypotenuse is 1 shaku and the shorter side of the triangle is 3 sun. (ii) The kaeshikōbai is defined as the angle ABC in figure 5, using a version of the sun method described in (c) above, although this time the ratio is expressed as the horizontal measure against the vertical. The example in the diagram gives a kaeshikōbai of 4 sun, as the horizontal is 4 sun and the vertical, one shaku.