Dictionary
peach
noun
A tree (), native to China and now widely cultivated throughout temperate regions, having pink flowers and edible fruit.
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The word 'peach' is correct and commonly used in written English.
It can be used in a variety of contexts, such as describing a fruit, a color, or even as a slang term. Example 1: I love the juicy sweetness of a ripe peach, especially in the summertime. Example 2: The walls of the nursery were painted a soft peach color, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere for the baby. Example 3: "That new restaurant downtown is a real peach, you have to try their homemade pasta!" exclaimed Jane to her friend. In these examples, 'peach' is used to refer to the fruit, the color, and as a positive term for something excellent.
Exact(53)
Cut the peaches in half, remove the stone, then cut each peach into 8 equal segments.
Two men sit at a wooden bar serving hot drinks, doughnuts and e-liquids such as Colonel Custard, Jack the Ripple ("British raspberry ripple ice-cream") and Capote ("Pineapple, peach, banana, cream").
For example, Greek peach farmers face ruin as their produce rots at the roadside.
Whitewashed rooms have simple wooden furniture, and the garden is lush with peach, lemon, apricot and fig trees, but the real highlight here is breakfast.
The floral and perfumed peach is acidic, so it cuts through the succulent chicken really well.
One combination I particularly like is peach with sticky chicken thighs.
Similar(7)
South Carolina peach-farmers, for instance, are both powerful and desperate for migrant labour, because their delicate fruit cannot be picked by machine (and locals dislike the work).
It is a giant peach-coloured building covered with stars and swirls, art deco gone intergalactic.
(It revolves around the "peachoid", a peach-shaped water tower erected in tribute to local farms that bears an unfortunate resemblance to a plump backside).
UFC says Vittel is fooling consumers by selling peach-flavoured water as a calcium-enriched mineral water.
August 6th is also the anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima in 1945, when the Japanese are reminded of the invisible horrors of radiation.In her maternity bed in this peach-farming town about 40km (25 miles) from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, Akemi Makuta, a 40-year-old mother, knows all about such fears.
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