1. cachet - Noun
2. cachet - Verb
A seal, as of a letter.
Source: Webster's dictionaryWhen my mother died, my father's early widowhood gave him social cachet he would not have had if they had divorced. He was a bigger catch for the sorrow attached. Amy Hempel
Chess only appeals to quite a small minority. It does not have the cachet of a mainstream popular sport. Magnus Carlsen
Independent films have a very different cachet than success films. Diane Lane
Men have got more of a discerning eye. They appreciate cut and details, things that aren't so obvious. They like things that have cachet and gentlemanliness. John Galliano
Journalism was looked upon as a more noble thing than it is now. I don't know if it carries the same cachet that it did then. Pat Oliphant
In China, going public has a cachet from a branding standpoint. It will improve our image to ad agencies, government regulators. Victor Koo