Verb
pigeons perching on the roof perched the baby in a basket
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Noun
Skydance owner David Ellison elevated Shell in 2024 from his brief perch at RedBird Capital, a financing partner in the Paramount deal.—Gary Baum, HollywoodReporter, 8 Apr. 2026 While the Ducks would have to crumble completely to outright miss the playoffs, their once comfortable perch has given way to a battle for seeding.—Andrew Knoll, Oc Register, 6 Apr. 2026
Verb
The restaurant is perched above the casino on the second floor, next to a food hall that boasts lobster rolls, burgers, pizza, sushi and, yes, tacos.—Jenn Harris, Los Angeles Times, 6 Apr. 2026 By 2024, his team had mapped nearly all of an enormous reef off the Carolina coast, perched a thousand metres down.—Jeffrey Marlow, New Yorker, 5 Apr. 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