A high-pitched whine in a Dodge Dakota only when the weather is cold might be a normal thing. When the weather gets cold, the belts, starter and alternator need time to warm up. Try a little drop of dish soap on the fan belt to see if this helps quiet the whining.
No, cold weather is bad. It can change the pitch of the strings.
It could be your fan shroud or radiator hose rubbing on the fan.
The pitch will increase if the object approaches, decrease if the object recedes.
The frequency of the vibrations. Sound frequencies are directly related to the perceived pitch.
Pushing in on the yoke will cause the nose to pitch down. Lowering the flaps will also cause the nose to pitch down.
Warmer temperatures (especially when humid) will cause the pitch of woodwind instruments to be sharp. Cooler temperatures will do the opposite, and cause the pitch to go flat.
There are many colors of the Dodge Charger. They are tungsten metallic, stinger yellow, redline, pitch black, white, silver, blue streak, and blackberry.
An air leak.
A beaned batter. A Brushback pitch is a pitch that is not meant to hit a batter but to push him away from the plate. An errant pitch would be to mess up, and in this instance a mistake would cause the pitcher to hit the batter.
It really depends. If it's cold outside and he's shivering, it may and might effect his pitch. Same thing with hot weather. If it's crazy hot out and he's sweating, it still might effect his pitch. But if he prepares himself before he pitches, it will turn out better.
In Europe, the weather is good sometimes and very bad the rest of the times. If they only played in good weather they'd never get the fixtures completed. The occassions where a match would be cancelled would be waterlogged pitch, and heavy snow (even snow and ice in surrounding areas can cause a match to be cancelled as spectator safety is key). I have been at matched where the fog was so thick I could only see 1/4 of the pitch and rarely see the ball.
Most likely a loose belt. Very coomon.