cachet 的定义
plural ca·chets [ka-sheyz, kash-eyz; French ka-she]. /kæˈʃeɪz, ˈkæʃ eɪz; French kaˈʃɛ/.
- an official seal, as on a letter or document.
- a distinguishing mark or feature; stamp: Courtesy is the cachet of good breeding.
- a sign or expression of approval, especially from a person who has a great deal of prestige.
- superior status; prestige: The job has a certain cachet.
- Pharmacology. a hollow wafer for enclosing an ill-tasting medicine.
- Philately. a firm name, slogan, or design stamped or printed on an envelope or folded letter.
cachet 近义词
distinction
更多cachet例句
- The likes of Nike and Adidas have long prided themselves on their ability to get out in front of whatever trend has cultural cachet with its fans.
- The automaker’s decision to reduce its lineup and focus on just one vehicle—the 500X subcompact crossover—only adds to the cachet.
- Pricing in media buys is always a complex calculation, dependent on time slot and event cachet, but these companies did not pay nothing.
- The cultural value of declaring oneself a Peace Prize nominee, though, has proven irresistible, given the cachet still associated with the prize.
- At first you wished you’d been assigned someone with a little more cachet.
- “The [Rockefeller] name carries a certain cachet because of Standard Oil,” he said.
- Time will tell whether the Upper East Side achieves lasting social cachet to go with the cash awash in the neighborhood.
- There was no social cachet associated with jazz at that juncture in American history—if anything, the contrary.
- Being a fan of Liquid Sky carries the cachet of degenerate hipness to this day, 32 years after it was filmed.
- “I think there was a cachet about having an African-American president because of guilt,” she said.
- Each cachet contained three decigrams of malourea, the insidious drug notorious under its trade name of Veronal.
- A lettre de cachet was sent after him to Bordeaux; but he avoided it by crossing into Spain.
- To think that any man of our free colony would use a lettre de cachet, and against a brother Canadian!
- He procured lettres de cachet from the King, and shut up his disobedient and debauched son in various state-prisons.
- There was no difficulty in obtaining this lettre de cachet, and the poor wretch was arrested and taken to the Bastille.