[
UK
/kˈæʃeɪ/
]
[ US /ˈkæʃeɪ/ ]
[ US /ˈkæʃeɪ/ ]
NOUN
- a warrant formerly issued by a French king who could warrant imprisonment or death in a signed letter under his seal
- an indication of approved or superior status
- a seal on a letter
How To Use cachet In A Sentence
- In these rarefied circles, being green brings cachet. Times, Sunday Times
- Indeed, I would argue that it has already happened to some degree, as student loans have democratized the college degree and worn off some of its cachet.
- ` ` The style of his Grace (to say nothing here of his thought, of which others have spoken words of admiration certainly not too strong) often runs into poetry; and it has everywhere that indescribable not-too-muchness which is always the cachet of high-class work. '' Ginx's Baby. His Birth and other Misfortunes: A Satire
- Indeed, it’s intellectual property where the cachet of a craftsman is probably gaining in currency. A Lament For Hattori Hanzo | Heretical Ideas Magazine
- C que je n'ai jamais faim meme sans les cachetons et je mange quand j'ressens un petit pincement a l'estomac, et les cachets m'enleve ce rare et precieux pincement ... Pinku-tk Diary Entry
- This being so, civilization in the singular has lost some of its cachet.
- Her presence lends a certain cachet to the company
- Wilmslow has always had a certain cachet and there is a great range of properties. Times, Sunday Times
- There are, or so I read, those who claim that a journalist writing a weblog adds a certain respectability and cachet to the medium.
- The latter are so unconcerned they barely market, or even edit, and as a result have so little money or cachet that they attract only the dull-witted (or the clever between gigs) to put ink on paper.