A cache of arms not a cachet: 20 words not to confuse (11-12)

People sometimes use cachet when cache is required. Despite having five letters in common, and coming ultimately from the same French verb (cacher), in English they are completely unrelated. A cache of something is a “collection of items of the same type stored in a hidden place” such as an arms cache or a cache of gold and rhymes with cash.

Roman-coin-find

Cachet is “prestige, high status; the quality of being respected or admired” and rhymes with sachet. The next two examples show the words being used correctly:


Several inmates seized a cache of grenades and other weapons and killed six security officers, including a high-ranking counterterrorism official;


The department stores knew they had to offer something different, something perceived to have more cachet.


In the next one, cachet is wrong, and cache would be correct: Egyptian excavators this week chanced upon a cachet of limestone reliefs.


Filed under: Advice for writers, Confusable words, Grammar, Meaning of words, Writing Skills Tagged: 20 confusable words
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Published on November 21, 2014 03:00
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