a hiding place; a hidden store of goods: He had a cache of nonperishable food in case of an invasion.
Not to be confused with:
cachet – an official seal, as on a letter or document; a distinguishing feature: Courtesy is the cachet of a gracious hostess.; superior status; prestige: The diplomatic corps has a certain cachet.
cash – currency or coins: They’d rather have cash than a credit card.
a. An amount of goods or valuables, especially when kept in a concealed or hard-to-reach place: maintained a cache of food in case of emergencies.
b. The concealed or hard-to-reach place used for storing a cache.
2. A fast storage buffer in the central processing unit of a computer. Also called cache memory.
tr.v.cached, cach·ing, cach·es
To hide or store in a cache. See Synonyms at hide1.
[French, from Middle French, from cacher, to hide, from Old French, from Vulgar Latin *coācticāre, to store, pack together, frequentative of Latin coāctāre, to constrain, frequentative of cōgere, coāct-, to force; see cogent.]
In evasion and recovery operations, source of subsistence and supplies, typically containing items such as food, water, medical items, and/or communications equipment, packaged to prevent damage from exposure and hidden in isolated locations by such methods as burial, concealment, and/or submersion, to support evaders in current or future operations. See also concealment; evader; evasion; evasion and recovery; recovery; recovery operations.
Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. US Department of Defense 2005.
Cache
a hiding place, hence, the items hidden; the stores of provisions hidden by travellers or explorers on their journeys.
Examples: cache of green boughs, 1866; of jewels; of meat, 1865; of a barrel of pork, 1842; of provisions; of silver, 1860; of treasure.
Dictionary of Collective Nouns and Group Terms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
fund, store, stock - a supply of something available for future use; "he brought back a large store of Cuban cigars"
3.
cache - (computer science) RAM memory that is set aside as a specialized buffer storage that is continually updated; used to optimize data transfers between system elements with different characteristics
buffer storage, buffer store, buffer - (computer science) a part of RAM used for temporary storage of data that is waiting to be sent to a device; used to compensate for differences in the rate of flow of data between components of a computer system
disk cache - a cache that stores copies of frequently used disk sectors in random access memory (RAM) so they can be read without accessing the slower disk
computer science, computing - the branch of engineering science that studies (with the aid of computers) computable processes and structures
Sporting what AMD calls as an entirely new microarchitecture called RDNA, the biggest announcement was the new 7nm based GPUs which will be part of AMD's much anticipated Radeon NAVI GPUs a.k.a.
[USA], Apr 2 (ANI): Researchers have developed biosensors that are structured similarly to that of the skin's microarchitecture and helps in the process of wound healing
In osteoporosis, the bone mineral density (BMD) is reduced, bone microarchitecture deteriorates, and the amount and variety of proteins in bone are altered.
The present study aims at analyzing effects of mannanoligosaccharide (MOS) and organic acid blend (OAB) supplementation individually and in combination on carcass yield, small intestinal microarchitecture and serum biochemistry in Hubbard chicks.
The researchers used dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) spine scans to assess spine trabecular microarchitecture by calculating trabecular bone score (TBS) at 0, 12, 24, 30, 36, and 48 months.
Neousys POC-300 utilizes Intel Atom[TM] x7-E3950 quad-core processor* that features an updated 14nm microarchitecture, Ultra HD 4K resolution support and faster memory speeds (greater memory bandwidth) for efficient computing.
According to the company, TBS iNsight is a unique, easy-to-use software application that assesses bone texture - an index of bone microarchitecture - which in turn is expressed as the Trabecular Bone Score (TBS).
The first volume addresses polyphenols in chronic diseases and their mechanisms, discussing polyphenols and health in general, including veterinary medicine and animal health, public health, Islamic medicine, stability and bioavailability, and polyphenols as supplements; polyphenols in obesity and diabetes; the oxidation and antioxidant activities of specific polyphenols, such as chocolate and green tea catechin; direct and indirect antioxidant protection from oxidation, cytoprotective actions, lower iron bioavailability, and galloylation and polymerization; inflammation; bioavailability and effects on metabolism; and clinical medicine and polyphenols, including bone microarchitecture, wound healing, reproductive health, the skin, and hepatoprotective actions.
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