How to Use cache in a Sentence

cache

1 of 2 noun
  • Police found a cache of stolen cars in the woods.
  • Her new laptop has one megabyte of cache.
  • Of the 16 pieces in the cache, seven works crossed the $10 million mark.
    Kelly Crow, wsj.com, 12 May 2023
  • The Core i9 and i7 variants include more cache per core than the i5 and i3 chips.
    Andrew Cunningham, Ars Technica, 3 Jan. 2023
  • The motion lists out the full collection of the weapons cache over about 35 pages.
    Jean Casarez, CNN, 28 Sep. 2023
  • Denmark is home to what’s thought to be the world’s largest collection of brains — a cache of 9,479 of them.
    Katie Hunt, CNN, 12 Nov. 2022
  • Some wolves will even steal other pack-mates food caches.
    Elizabeth Gamillo, Discover Magazine, 16 Sep. 2023
  • Hundreds of years ago, someone filled an oak box with a cache of coins.
    Moira Ritter, Miami Herald, 1 Feb. 2024
  • Every man needs a go-to cache of reliable crew socks in his wardrobe.
    Mike Richard, Men's Health, 3 Mar. 2023
  • Some of the orchids will be displayed in cache pots that Howng created.
    Alicia Ault, Smithsonian Magazine, 15 Feb. 2024
  • Take a look at Buy Side’s guide for choosing the best high-yield savings account for your cash cache.
    Martha C. White, wsj.com, 11 Sep. 2023
  • Snorkel in a cenote containing the second largest cache of Mayan remains in the region.
    Jonathan Soroff, Robb Report, 25 July 2023
  • The conviction that Michael had a cache of treasure was real.
    Tim Dickinson, Rolling Stone, 17 Dec. 2022
  • The way to find the caches is by downloading GPS coordinates.
    Pete Zimowsky, Idaho Statesman, 31 Jan. 2024
  • Homer says one cleaner found a cache of acorns and rat poison under some cushions.
    Jura Koncius, Washington Post, 1 Aug. 2023
  • But don’t wait to gather a huge cache of these comments, Ruettimann adds.
    Rachel Shin, Fortune, 30 July 2023
  • He was told the cache had recently been turned over to the National Archives, which furnished Barnouw with copies.
    Thomas Doherty, The Hollywood Reporter, 12 Sep. 2023
  • The ministry also said that authorities found a large gasoline cache in the home.
    Hazem Balousha and Miriam Berger, Anchorage Daily News, 18 Nov. 2022
  • That said, hair disaster videos have unique cache on TikTok.
    Ellie Pithers, Vogue, 1 Nov. 2022
  • Before Thursday’s game, the Lumen Christi team met their opponents with a large cache of snacks.
    Chris Bieri, Anchorage Daily News, 17 Mar. 2023
  • Destroying a major cache like the ones intercepted in the fall could still present a challenge.
    Gerrit De Vynck, Washington Post, 20 Jan. 2024
  • People and organizations have set up caches all over the world.
    Pete Zimowsky, Idaho Statesman, 31 Jan. 2024
  • Rubin says a job in D.C. once turned up a cache of intricate blueprints stashed under a cushion.
    Jura Koncius, Washington Post, 1 Aug. 2023
  • The cache will be collected by future missions during the Mars Sample Return campaign and returned to Earth in the 2030s.
    Ashley Strickland, CNN, 7 Dec. 2022
  • Hyrule is littered with caches of wooden planks, beams, and wheels and a variety of neon-green machines called Zonai devices to pair with them.
    Vulture, 12 May 2023
  • As before, the company has none of your data on its servers, and your access tokens and cache are stored on a local Mac keychain.
    Kevin Purdy, Ars Technica, 22 May 2023
  • There was a cache of weapons hidden somewhere in Kherson, and Ihor needed to bury them in a different location and wait for the signal.
    Kamila Hrabchuk, Washington Post, 18 Nov. 2022
  • Both in terms of its cultural cache and the fact that speakers were just, well, literally huge, taking up half the space in many college dorm rooms.
    Buy Side Staff, wsj.com, 10 Oct. 2023
  • Occasionally clearing your cache (https://bit.ly/3I7cEJz) is the best way to avoid this scenario.
    Ken Colburn, The Arizona Republic, 4 Mar. 2024
  • Hefner had a cache of tapes and videos of orgies and drug consumption to use in case anyone threatened to squeal, according to Theodore and others.
    Maria Puente, USA TODAY, 10 July 2023
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cache

2 of 2 verb
  • Jordan Reed is one of the best pass-caching tight ends in the game.
    Pat Fitzmaurice, SI.com, 2 Aug. 2017
  • Dyn was first to spot the emergence of the Google caching servers on the internet.
    Martyn Williams, PCWorld, 26 Apr. 2017
  • The records have since been removed from the websites where they had been cached.
    Stephanie Strom, New York Times, 27 Dec. 2016
  • The page is no longer there, but Google cached a copy of the site on January 3.
    Timothy B. Lee, Ars Technica, 10 Jan. 2018
  • This is valuable to a range of database-like and caching workloads.
    Peter Bright, Ars Technica, 31 May 2018
  • These people cached their weapons in Virginia, across the river.
    Marilyn W. Thompson, ProPublica, 28 Feb. 2023
  • These middens are where the Mount Graham red squirrels cache their cones.
    Anton L. Delgado, The Arizona Republic, 2 Nov. 2020
  • The fight against climate change scaled up with wind-caching turbines and bloody, delicious non-meat.
    Popsci Staff, Popular Science, 27 Dec. 2019
  • Leverage Caching One of the most effective ways to speed up a website is by leveraging caching.
    Expert Panel®, Forbes, 7 Mar. 2023
  • The snafu rendered the files, which were cached by Google, to be publicly exposed and viewed by anyone without a password.
    Sam Wood, Philly.com, 4 Apr. 2018
  • Each individual bird will transport up to 7,000 acorns a year and cache them.
    Debbie Arrington, sacbee, 19 Jan. 2018
  • Typically, massive files can take a while to write to disk due to caching issues, but the 860 Evo was a champ under pressure.
    Ian Paul, PCWorld, 17 Sep. 2018
  • Beavers Beavers build dams to create still water for their underwater homes, called lodges, where the rodents cache food for the winter.
    Brian Gordon Green, National Geographic, 9 June 2018
  • The data cannot be easily removed, because they are cached on the Internet.
    Trisha Thadani, San Francisco Chronicle, 5 Feb. 2018
  • Responding officers found a small container with a pink eraser and geo-caching sign-in sheet inside the base.
    Andy Attina / Cleveland.com, cleveland.com, 4 Apr. 2018
  • In case something happens to Percy over the next few years, the rover will also cache some samples in a safe, flat place where they can be retrieved easily.
    WIRED, 16 Sep. 2022
  • The expedition to place the device was thwarted by heavy snowfall so the team cached the equipment––including some 10 pounds of plutonium to power a generator––and planned to return the next spring to finish the task.
    Anna Callaghan, Outside Online, 6 June 2019
  • Moreover, the planetary protection office has not yet agreed on the efficacy of the techniques JPL will use to sterilize the tubes in which the rover will cache rock cores.
    Paul Voosen, Science | AAAS, 3 Aug. 2017
  • That includes making noise so as not to surprise bears, not allowing bears to get into human food, and staying away from food bears have cached, Harms said.
    Casey Grove, Anchorage Daily News, 7 June 2013
  • But the modifications to cache can be detected, and this can be used to infer the contents of kernel memory.
    Peter Bright, Ars Technica, 14 Aug. 2018
  • Surplus killings tend to be most common in late winter and may actually represent an effort by wolves to cache food for later use, the group notes.
    Brian Clark Howard, National Geographic, 25 Mar. 2016
  • Indeed, many people still cache their nudes in bedrooms and bathrooms, a move New York architect Calvin Tsao considers clichéd.
    Julie Lasky, WSJ, 27 July 2017
  • The mission will have two focuses: to give us a better perspective on whether Mars has ever hosted life and to cache rocks for a sample return mission.
    John Timmer, Ars Technica, 19 Nov. 2018
  • To continue their research into robot deception, Arkin and his team were inspired by the food caching behaviors of squirrels.
    IEEE Spectrum, 3 Dec. 2012
  • If all goes according to plan, Perseverance will amass dozens of rock samples from throughout Jezero Crater over the next couple years, then cache them for a future sample return mission to pick up.
    Ramin Skibba, Wired, 2 Sep. 2021
  • But over that time, how many developers abided by Facebook’s rules? How many followed Kogan’s route, caching the data and making their own private databases?
    Robinson Meyer, The Atlantic, 20 Mar. 2018
  • Perseverance has a sophisticated system to collect samples, cache them and stow them on the Martian surface.
    Ashley Strickland, CNN, 1 Aug. 2020
  • All photos stored in the desktop folder are also automatically cached as thumbnails.
    Dan Goodin, Ars Technica, 18 June 2018
  • In addition to providing culinary experiences, restaurants come with jobs, tax revenue and sometimes cache.
    Jeanne Houck, Cincinnati.com, 28 Sep. 2017
  • Even more significant, Perseverance will cache the most intriguing Mars samples so that they can eventually be collected and brought back to Earth as early as 2031.
    Popular Science, 7 Jan. 2021

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'cache.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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