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Dec 17, 2021
This week’s themeFruits This week’s words apple knocker banana oil razz sour grapes peachy Photo: Punny Bone / Zazzle This week’s comments AWADmail 1016 Next week’s theme No el A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargpeachy
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: 1. Resembling a peach. 2. Excellent; highly desirable. ETYMOLOGY:
From peach, from Latin persicum malum (Persian apple). Earliest documented
use: 1599.
NOTES:
Why peachy to refer to something excellent, as opposed to, say,
appley? Well, peaches are apples too, etymologically speaking. The word
peach comes to us from Latin persicum malum, from the former belief that
peaches originated in Persia. They actually came from China where some
enterprising fruit seller has now taken things a bit too far. Undergarments on peaches? So back to, why peachy? Peaches are wonderful. You have to admit the joy of holding a juicy plump peach in your hand and biting into it. The word peach has been used for a long time for something or someone attractive. Now that the fruit week is over, it's time for a question. What does a playwright order at a juice bar? Pear shakes. USAGE:
“And the oil business is looking peachy. ... This has encouraged gas
producers to scurry after oil in liquid-rich shale beds such as the
Bakken in North Dakota.” Put That in Your Pipe; The Economist (London, UK); May 5, 2012. See more usage examples of peachy in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Contentment is, after all, simply refined indolence. -Thomas Chandler
Haliburton, author, judge, and politician (17 Dec 1796-1865)
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