[f. CACHE sb.: cf. F. cacher.] trans. To put in a cache; to store (provisions) under ground; said also of animals.

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1856.  Kane, Arct. Expl., I. xxiii. 288. He accordingly cached enough provision to last them back.

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1865.  Visct. Milton & W. B. Cheadle, Northwest Passage by Land, V. 75. We now proceeded … to remove the cask from its hiding-place, and … to cache it safely at some distance.

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1877.  Coues, Fur Anim., ii. 51. When they [wolverenes] can eat no more, they continue to steal the baits and câche them.

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