cache
noun/kæʃ/UK/kæʃ/US/kæɪʃ/
Etymology
From French cache (as used by French Canadian trappers to mean “hiding place for stores”), from the verb cacher (“to hide”).
- borrowed from cache
Definitions
A store, protected and often hidden in some way, of things that may be required in the…
A store, protected and often hidden in some way, of things that may be required in the future, such that they can be retrieved rapidly.
- Near-synonym: stash
- Members of the 29-man Discovery team laid down caches to allow the polar team to travel light, hopping from cache to cache on their return journey.
- I came across a cache of old photos / And invitations to teenage parties
To place in a cache.
- And here the adventurers went ashore, unloaded, turned their canoe bottom up in the shelter of thick brush, and cached their supplies temporarily on a pole scaffold, out of reach of prowling depredators.
To store data in a cache.
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To participate in geocaching.
To hide or seek a geocache.
to store up, stockpile
Misspelling of cachet.
- The prophecies are an attempt to explore the mystery of democracy, to divine its origin in order to capitalize on its political cache, but also to diagnose the cause of its contemporary malaise.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for cache. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA