What is the meaning of PEACH. Phrases containing PEACH
See meanings and uses of PEACH!Slangs & AI meanings
A crush on an older pupil or teacher
Female genital area.
1 n unit of measure (14lbs). Only really used when measuring the weight of people. 2 n pit. The large hard seeds inside fruit (peaches, olives and the like).
Informing
amphetamine
n. an older classic car that is in great condition. "Did you see Ray-Jay in that new slab rollin' down Peachtree? That whip is a beast!" 2. adj. In the south SLAB means slow, loud, and bangin'. "I only roll wit slab riders man."Â
unusually good or fine (courtesy of Kaitlynn Leary)
Stewed, dried peaches
Split is slang for to divulge a secret; to betray confidence; to peach. Split is slang for depart; leave.Split is slang for the vagina. Split is slang for to share.Split is British slang for a detective.
Apricot and peach is British rhyming slang for beach.
Stewed, dried peaches
to tell or inform against; reveal a secret
To mean good, excellant ace. Used as "My new bike is peachy/ peachy beef.", "I let off a peach of a fart.".
Gold fish is Black−American slang for sliced peaches
Amphetamine
Peach pie
Peachy is American slang for wonderful, excellent.
Peach pie
Peach is slang for to inform against an accomplice.
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n.
A smooth-skinned variety of peach.
n.
Fruit preserved with sugar, as peaches, pears, melons, nuts, orange peel, etc.; -- usually in the plural; a confect; a confection.
n.
One who peaches.
n.
The fleshy part of a stone fruit, situated between the skin, or epicarp, and the stone, or endocarp, as in a peach. See Illust. of Endocarp.
n.
An early ripening fruit, especially a kind of freestone peach.
superl.
Easily yielding to pressure; easily impressed, molded, or cut; not firm in resisting; impressible; yielding; also, malleable; -- opposed to hard; as, a soft bed; a soft peach; soft earth; soft wood or metal.
a.
Resembling a peach or peaches.
n.
Like pulp; consisting of pulp; soft; fleshy; succulent; as, the pulpy covering of a nut; the pulpy substance of a peach or a cherry.
v. i.
To divulge a secret; to betray confidence; to peach.
a.
Of the color of a peach blossom.
a.
Thin and rather soft or pliable, as the leaves of the rose, peach tree, and aspen poplar.
n.
The hard endocarp of drupes; as, the stone of a cherry or peach. See Illust. of Endocarp.
n.
A cordial of brandy, etc., flavored with the kernel of the bitter almond, or of the peach stone, etc.
n.
A spirituous liquor flavored with the kernels of cherries, apricots, peaches, or other fruit, spiced, and sweetened with sugar; -- a term applied to the liqueurs called noyau, cura/ao, etc.
a.
Of or pertaining to a very large natural order of plants (Rubiaceae) named after the madder (Rubia tinctoria), and including about three hundred and seventy genera and over four thousand species. Among them are the coffee tree, the trees yielding peruvian bark and quinine, the madder, the quaker ladies, and the trees bearing the edible fruits called genipap and Sierre Leone peach, besides many plants noted for the beauty or the fragrance of their blossoms.
n.
An inclosure containing fruit trees; also, the fruit trees, collectively; -- used especially of apples, peaches, pears, cherries, plums, or the like, less frequently of nutbearing trees and of sugar maple trees.
n.
A disease of plants, esp. of peach trees, in which the leaves turn to a yellowish color; jeterus.
n.
A kind of peach having one side deep red, and the flesh yellow.
n.
The quality or condition of being succulent; juiciness; as, the succulence of a peach.
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