An indication of approved or superior status.
A warrant formerly issued by a French king who could warrant imprisonment or death in a signed letter under his seal.
1 Matthew's work as an accountant did not carry quite the same cachet .
2 The Tour de France has always had a special cachet in sport.
3 The money was tempting, and the job title had a certain cachet .
4 They also give H&M cachet that its rivals simply do not have.
5 The cachet attached to coffee in this country has undergone several shifts.
6 For flamenco aficionados, the name of Don Flamenco commands a similar cachet .
7 The trousers, it must be said, had a certain cachet of distinction.
8 Or the old type of farmed salmon may gain a special cachet .
9 But was it Paul McCartney that walked away with the pop-cultural cachet ?
10 What's different about Demon is its cachet as a grassroots access provider.
11 But the calendar also has great cachet outside the tire community.
12 Still, newspapers have cachet and value in their communities, Barone said.
13 As weapons of destruction, bombs have never had much moral cachet .
14 That higher-quality content also increased MTV's cachet with audiences and advertisers.
15 That has eroded the iPhone's cachet and customers' willingness to pay premium prices.
16 Gives it reinvigorated cachet , extra currency, a sorely needed infusion of fresh energy.
Другие примеры для термина "cachet"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Cachet в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки