peach
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peach
Summary
peach ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (37 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- peach is a type of drupe[2].
- peach is a type of fruit[3].
- peach's Commons category is recorded as Peaches[4].
- peach's color is recorded as red[5].
- peach's color is recorded as pink[6].
- peach's color is recorded as yellow[7].
- peach's color is recorded as orange[8].
- peach's color is recorded as pale yellow[9].
- peach's Unicode character is recorded as 🍑[10].
- peach comprises (R)-amygdalin[11].
- peach comprises peach pit[12].
- peach's described by source is recorded as Metropolitan Museum of Art Tagging Vocabulary[13].
- peach's natural product of taxon is recorded as Prunus persica[14].
- peach's different from is recorded as Patricia Elaine Reasoner[15].
- peach's permanent duplicated item is recorded as Q111853592[16].
- peach's carbon footprint is recorded as {'unit': 'Q57084968', 'amount': '+0.6'}[17].
- peach's food energy is recorded as {'unit': 'Q130964', 'amount': '+39'}[18].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded subclass of include drupe[2] and fruit[3].
Use and Application
Components include (R)-amygdalin[11], a type of chemical entity[19] and peach pit[12].
Influence
Things named for peach include peach[20], a color[21] and Peach County[22], a county of Georgia[23], in United States[24], founded in 1924[25].
Why It Matters
peach ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (37 views/month).[1] peach has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] peach is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]
Entities named for peach include peach[20], a color[21] and Peach County[22], a county of Georgia[23], in United States[24], founded in 1924[25].