Do we say cache or cachet

cache 136 occurrences

III THE CACHE Outwardly the book accorded ill with its surroundings.

I put up a signal pole on the headland and cache this record under it this afternoon.

He just had time to scrawl that last message and drop the book into the cache.

The first instinctive movement of the little creatures is to make a cache, and bury in it beliefs, doubts, dreams, hopes, and terrors.

She went to their food cache and ransacked it hastily.

In Gus Ingle's treasure-cache they had at last come to Gus Ingle's treasure.

It was all over in a flash, but it told the man from Montana who the informer was that had betrayed to the police the place of the whiskey cache.

"Figured I'd forget the ol' whiskey cache, eh?

"Where is she?" "She at Jasper's cabin on Cache Creek.

That fellow West has got Jessie McRae with him on Cache Creek.

The only guide they had was Cache Creek, along the bank of which they were traveling.

And that was giving Frank more or less concern, even while he continued to linger at the farmhouse because Andy wished to prowl around a little while longer in hopes of getting some clue to the location of the cache where the thieves had hidden their plunder.

I wish I knew how we could track this Casper Blue to where the other yegg is hiding near the biplane, and watch them until we saw where they had the cache.

He commonly remains on guard near his cache until he has acquired an appetite.

The scent he had caught came from the direction of his cache, and it was an odour which he was not in a humour to tolerate in this particular locality.

Seventy-five yards below them their cache was being outraged.

The black had done more than ravage his cache.

"This morning the black came along, smelled the meat, an' robbed the cache.

It was not cleared and so close to White Cache, St. Francis and Mississippi rivers.

Ever since the wreck actually took place I have looked forward to this cache of provisions as a point of refuge on my way south.

"True, boy; yet it surprises me that they succeeded in breaking into my cache, for it was made of heavy masses of stone, many of which required two and three men to lift them, even with the aid of handspikes.

Il montre une feinte sous laquelle se cache sa finesse.

F FABLE, f., conte qui cache une moralité sous une fiction.

He would cache those chaps at his first camp out, and get them when he returned.

The numbers were yet sufficient for short expeditions, and one was immediately fitted out for the head of Tuladi with provisions to form a cache for future operations.

cachet 49 occurrences

He wondered if the girl did not herself know her own attractions, forgetful that he had not seen them plainly till a man higher placed in the social scale set the cachet of a gentleman's admiration upon them.

Messieurs Benouville et Le Brun, two extravagantly insignificant young men, exquisitely groomed and presumably wealthy, who were making the bravest efforts to seem unaware that to be seen with Liane Delorme conferred an unimpeachable cachet.

He could afford to cart the thing back to Paris with him and give it room in his private gallery; and some day, doubtless, some rich American would pay a handsome price for it on the strength of its having found place in the collection of Michael Lanyard, even though it lacked the cachet of his guarantee.

"Le roi signa une lettre de cachet qui défendait cette représentation.

"The lettres de cachet were carried to an excess hardly credible; to the length of being sold, with blanks, to be filled up with names at the pleasure of the purchaser, who was thus able, in the gratification of private revenge, to tear a man from the bosom of his family, and bury him in a dungeon, where he would exist forgotten and die unknown.

No kilted Jock goes with more swagger down Princes Street than Johnny Gurkha down the bazaar of Darrapore, particularly in the evening, when he doffs khaki for the mufti suit of his clanthe spotless white shorts, coat of black sateen, little cocked cap and brightly bordered stockingsa mode de rigueur that would be robbed of its final cachet without the black umbrella, tucked well up under the arm.

She was allowed to draw bills upon the treasury without specifying the service, and those who incurred her displeasure were almost sure of being banished from the court and kingdom, and perhaps sentenced, by lettre de cachet, to the dreary cells of the Bastille.

arrest, arrestation^; custody, keep, care, charge, ward, restringency^. curb &c (means of restraint) 752; lettres de cachet

No matter what the cut of the cloth, no matter what cachet of a fashionable tailor a suit may have, or what its richness of material, the attitude "à la decadence" of No. 93 would make the best clothes in Christendom look shabby and unattractive.

Have you a lettre de cachet?" "There is one here, sire.

Had the baronet been in the way of a lettre de cachet, like Mirabeau's father, he would certainly have had Percy put into Newgate and kept there.

He knew what the varsity cachet would do for his prospects in the world.

Lettre de cachet, v. 206.

Of course they are always in litigation, but, as I told you, a lawsuit is a cachet of respectability in France.

For one Lettre de Cachet issued during the mild reign of LOUIS the Sixteenth, a thousand Mandats d'Arret have been granted by the tyrannical demagogues of the revolution; for one Bastile which existed under the Monarchy, a thousand Maisons de Detention have been established by the Republic.

No matter how simple her arrangements, she gives her pictures a cachet of distinction.

dear George: I am laying in scraps of Cato against it may be necessary to take leave of one's correspondents à la Romaine, and before the play itself is suppressed by a lettre de cachet to the book-sellers.

A mousquetaire, his piece loaded with a lettre de cachet, went about a fortnight ago to the notary who keeps the parliamentary registers, and demanded them.

They were refusedbut given up, on the lettre de cachet being produced.

Zephyr Grandissime married, still later, a lady of rank, a widow without children, sent from France to Biloxi under a lettre de cachet.

The old nobility of their stock, including particularly the unnamed blood of her of the lettre de cachet, showed forth in a gracefulness of carriage, that almost identified a De Grandissime wherever you saw him, and in a transparency of flesh and classic beauty of feature, that made their daughters extra-marriageable in a land and day which was bearing a wide reproach for a male celibacy not of the pious sort.

CACHET, LETTRE DE, a warrant issued in France before the Revolution, under the royal seal, for the arrest and imprisonment of a person, often obtained to gratify private ends; abolished in 1790.

The Carl Rosa Company, DRURIOLANO IMPERATORE, wouldn't wait for the production of an Opera in Paris in order to bring it out here with the French cachet, but determined to have one done all for themselves, and to bring it out here first.

It had cachet, she thought.

* THE CACHET OF CASH AT DRURY LANE.

Do we say   cache   or  cachet