A position that is secure, advantageous, or prominent.
A linear measure equal to 5.50 yards or 16.5 feet (5.03 meters); a rod.
One square rod of land.
A pole, stick, or rod.
Chiefly British
A linear measure equal to 5.50 yards or 16.5 feet (5.03 meters); a rod.
One square rod of land.
A unit of cubic measure used in stonework, usually 16.5 feet by 1.0 foot by 1.5 feet, or 24.75 cubic feet (0.70 cubic meter).
A frame on which cloth is laid for examination of quality.
v.
perched, perch·ing, perch·es
v.
intr.
To alight or rest on a perch; roost: A raven perched high in the pine.
To stand, sit, or rest on an elevated place or position.
v.
tr.
To place on or as if on a perch: The child perched the glass on the edge of the counter.
To lay (cloth) on a perch in order to examine it.
[Middle English perche, from Old French, from Latin pertica, stick, pole.]
perch 2 (pûrch) n.
pl.perch or perch·es
Any of various spiny-finned freshwater fishes of the genus Perca, especially either of two edible species, P. flavescens, of North America, and P. fluviatilis, of Europe.
Any of various similar or related fishes, such as the pike perch or the grouper.
[Middle English perche, from Old French, from Latin perca, from Greek perkē.]