Roaches vs Poaches - What's the difference?
roaches | poaches |
(poach)
To cook something in simmering water.
* {{quote-book, year=1931, author=
, title=Death Walks in Eastrepps
, chapter=1/1 To be cooked in simmering water
* Francis Bacon
To become soft or muddy.
* Mortimer
To make soft or muddy.
(obsolete) To stab; to pierce; to spear, as fish.
(obsolete) To force, drive, or plunge into anything.
* Sir W. Temple
(obsolete) To begin and not complete.
(intransitive) To take game or fish illegally.
(intransitive) To take anything illegally or unfairly.
(intransitive) To cause an employee or customer to switch from a competing company to your own company.
As a noun roaches
is .As a verb poaches is
(poach).poaches
English
Verb
(head)poach
English
Etymology 1
Verb
(es)citation, passage=Eldridge closed the despatch-case with a snap and, rising briskly, walked down the corridor to his solitary table in the dining-car. Mulligatawny soup, poached turbot, roast leg of lamb—the usual railway dinner.}}
- The white of an egg with spirit of wine, doth bake the egg into clots, as if it began to poach .
- Chalky and clay lands chap in summer, and poach in winter.
- Cattle coming to drink had punched and poached the river bank into a mess of mud.
- (Tennyson)
- (Carew)
- his horse poaching one of his legs into some hollow ground
- (Francis Bacon)