Utah=] A handsome and exceedingly conspicuous plant, forming a large clump of rather coarse, dark foliage, adorned with many magnificent flowers.
Flesh somewhat tough, stringy, rather coarse, vinous, sweet at skin to acid at center, fair in quality.
Wood heavy, hard, rather coarse-grained, dark brown often mottled, with thick pale sapwood of from 8 to 10 layers of annual growth.
Perhaps it suffices to say that the peach began to be cultivated in England at the close of the Middle Ages--a time sufficiently vague to be convenient in the state of inexactness of our knowledge.
The man who sells the peaches at eleven pence each, will not grow rich by his business, any more than the grower.
Much use is made in classifying peaches of the presence or absence, the size, color, shape, position and number of glands on the base of the leaf or on the leaf-stalk.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rather coarse" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.