How to Use cache in a Sentence
- Police found a cache of stolen cars in the woods.
- Her new laptop has one megabyte of cache.
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In time, the race lost its cache.
—Cory Mull, Forbes.com, 22 Aug. 2025
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Williams had two touchdown caches on the night.
—Ryan Gaydos, FOXNews.com, 3 Oct. 2025
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Did Grant’s strong start build up enough cache to make it through cuts?
—Dieter Kurtenbach, Mercury News, 19 Aug. 2025
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The like ski bum cache of like the frugal Gourmet.
—Outside Online, 24 Dec. 2025
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Delete your cache files to avoid any artifacts.
—Dan Goodin, ArsTechnica, 27 Apr. 2026
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Hundreds of years ago, someone filled an oak box with a cache of coins.
—Moira Ritter, Miami Herald, 1 Feb. 2024
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Every man needs a go-to cache of reliable crew socks in his wardrobe.
—Mike Richard, Men's Health, 3 Mar. 2023
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Unplug it from the wall for 60 seconds so the cache clears.
—Kurt Knutsson, FOXNews.com, 5 Dec. 2025
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Clear your cache or change to a different browser.
—Hannah Chubb, Condé Nast Traveler, 17 June 2026
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The gray hoards his food, making caches of acorns and other nuts or burying them in the ground.
—Charles Elliott, Outdoor Life, 21 Aug. 2025
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The new cache of video also includes footage from five more cameras inside the prison.
—Daniel Ruetenik, CBS News, 31 Dec. 2025
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Each exchange expands the KV cache.
—David Noy, Forbes.com, 25 June 2026
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The motion lists out the full collection of the weapons cache over about 35 pages.
—Jean Casarez, CNN, 28 Sep. 2023
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Judd informs her that the weapon used at Abbotsfield was stolen from a cache at a gun fair.
—Scott Tobias, Vulture, 1 Oct. 2025
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Of the 16 pieces in the cache, seven works crossed the $10 million mark.
—Kelly Crow, wsj.com, 12 May 2023
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Some of the orchids will be displayed in cache pots that Howng created.
—Alicia Ault, Smithsonian Magazine, 15 Feb. 2024
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Over time, this cache can fill up and start slowing your connection instead of helping it.
—Roxanne Downer, USA Today, 23 Sep. 2025
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The conviction that Michael had a cache of treasure was real.
—Tim Dickinson, Rolling Stone, 17 Dec. 2022
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If origin servers go down or are slow, edge caches can still serve stale content temporarily.
—Expert Panel®, Forbes.com, 8 Sep. 2025
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But don’t wait to gather a huge cache of these comments, Ruettimann adds.
—Rachel Shin, Fortune, 30 July 2023
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People and organizations have set up caches all over the world.
—Pete Zimowsky, Idaho Statesman, 31 Jan. 2024
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Trump returned Friday to his on-and-off demand for the removal of the cache as part of a deal.
—Arkansas Online, 30 May 2026
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Trump returned Friday to his on-and-off demand for the removal of the cache as part of a deal.
—Michelle L. Price, Chicago Tribune, 29 May 2026
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Perhaps adding to their cache of picks would have diminishing returns.
—Michael Shapiro, Chron, 31 Jan. 2023
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That creates more [key value] cache needs, which requires even more memory.
—Tobias Burns, CNBC, 11 May 2026
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One is to place the nursery pot inside a cache pot, or a decorative pot without drainage holes.
—Alexandra Jones, The Spruce, 22 Jan. 2026
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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
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Clear your browser cache and cookies to lessen the chance of potential issues at checkout.
—Katie Decker-Jacoby, StyleCaster, 24 June 2026
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The records have since been removed from the websites where they had been cached.
—Stephanie Strom, New York Times, 27 Dec. 2016
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There was also a supply of gas cached at the campsite.
—Doris Decleene, Outdoor Life, 25 Feb. 2026
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This is valuable to a range of database-like and caching workloads.
—Peter Bright, Ars Technica, 31 May 2018
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Static content is cached closer to end users.
—Expert Panel®, Forbes.com, 8 Sep. 2025
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Dyn was first to spot the emergence of the Google caching servers on the internet.
—Martyn Williams, PCWorld, 26 Apr. 2017
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These people cached their weapons in Virginia, across the river.
—Marilyn W. Thompson, ProPublica, 28 Feb. 2023
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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
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These middens are where the Mount Graham red squirrels cache their cones.
—Anton L. Delgado, The Arizona Republic, 2 Nov. 2020
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Peanuts in the shell can be offered to large birds like woodpeckers, jays, and crows, which will cache them for the winter.
—Brandee Gruener, Southern Living, 15 Oct. 2025
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Best to keep backups of all of that data stashed, cached, and out of harm’s way—and space makes an ideal safe deposit box.
—Jeffrey Kluger, Time, 7 Jan. 2026
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Our approach goes beyond surface level prompts or caching results.
—Sandy Carter, Forbes.com, 16 Jan. 2026
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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
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The Settings page also lets you password-protect, set a favicon for, and cache your site.
—PC Magazine, 23 Nov. 2025
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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
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This prevents session hijacking if the system keeps tokens cached.
—Kurt Knutsson, FOXNews.com, 22 Sep. 2025
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Each individual bird will transport up to 7,000 acorns a year and cache them.
—Debbie Arrington, sacbee, 19 Jan. 2018
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The data cannot be easily removed, because they are cached on the Internet.
—Trisha Thadani, San Francisco Chronicle, 5 Feb. 2018
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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
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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
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Poor caching quietly increases latency, cloud cost, battery usage and backend load at scale.
—Expert Panel®, Forbes.com, 23 June 2026
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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
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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
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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
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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
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Performance is handled through LiteSpeed servers with built-in caching and optimization.
—Stackcommerce Team, PC Magazine, 8 Apr. 2026
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The new chip has a second-generation caching architecture that helps to double its ability to do math, the company said.
—Kif Leswing, CNBC, 9 Sep. 2025
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All photos stored in the desktop folder are also automatically cached as thumbnails.
—Dan Goodin, Ars Technica, 18 June 2018
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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
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In addition to providing culinary experiences, restaurants come with jobs, tax revenue and sometimes cache.
—Jeanne Houck, Cincinnati.com, 28 Sep. 2017
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Perseverance has a sophisticated system to collect samples, cache them and stow them on the Martian surface.
—Ashley Strickland, CNN, 1 Aug. 2020
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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