Verb
pigeons perching on the roof perched the baby in a basket
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Noun
That front-row perch can be found at Residence 4701 at The Avery, a 47th-floor condominium listed at 488 Folsom Street.—David Caraccio, Sacbee.com, 31 Mar. 2026 The Padres haven’t won an NL West title in two decades, but their 2022 knocked the Dodgers off their perch — and out of the playoffs.—Jeff Sanders, San Diego Union-Tribune, 29 Mar. 2026
Verb
The venue, perched atop Edge — the highest outdoor sky deck in the Western Hemisphere at 1,131 feet — transforms the observation deck into a high-energy nightlife destination each summer.—Abigail Park, Billboard, 30 Mar. 2026 As soon as Wednesday, a four-person crew could launch on a mission to fly around the moon in an Orion capsule that's currently perched at the top of a 322-foot, orange-and-white rocket waiting at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.—Nell Greenfieldboyce, NPR, 30 Mar. 2026 See All Example Sentences for perch
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English perche, from Anglo-French, from Latin pertica pole
Noun (2)
Middle English perche, from Anglo-French, from Latin perca, from Greek perkē; akin to Old High German faro colored, Latin porcus, a spiny fish