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The phrase "a cache of objects" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a collection or storage of items, often in a context related to computing or data storage.
Example: "The programmer discovered a cache of objects that had been stored in the system for future use."
Alternatives: "a collection of items" or "a store of objects".
Exact(6)
On the third day, we stumbled over a cache of objects at the base of the pyramid that would prove to be of singular importance.
While everyone else was focusing on the Egyptian Spring, the thoughts of archaeologists rested more tremulously on the fate of a cache of objects stolen from the Cairo Museum.
In the middle of the bridge, the woman opened the bag to reveal a cache of objects, including a wireless speaker and a stethoscope, which she draped around her neck.
But the focus here -- and it gives the proceedings a kind of treasure-hunt thrill -- is a cache of objects excavated fairly recently from tombs in Central Asia and belonging to non-Scythian people whose identity is something of a mystery.
The Met has drop-dead museological rarities from the State Hermitage Museum, but the focus here, which gives the proceedings a kind treasure-hunt thrill, is on a cache of objects excavated fairly recently from tombs belonging to non-Scythian people whose identity is something of a mystery.
The Met has drop-dead museological rarities from the State Hermitage Museum, but the focus here, which gives the proceedings a kind of treasure-hunt thrill, is on a cache of objects excavated fairly recently from tombs belonging to non-Scythian people whose identity is something of a mystery.
Similar(54)
Highlights of its collection are Lucas Cranach's 1538 "Adam and Eve"; a cache of Byzantine objects, including bronze pieces and icons; and work from some of Canada's most influential painters, the early 20th-century Group of Seven.
One year ago, Fallah hit an estate sale in North Hollywood where he stumbled upon a cache of personal objects belonging to one family: photographs, diaries and home movies.
Polaroid photos of an immense cache of objects in his Swiss warehouse apparently identified a second or first century BC jug offered for £4,000-£6,000 ($6,700-$10,000) at Christie's, and a third century pottery pyxis (cosmetic pot) offered for £3,000-£5,000 ($5,000-$8,400) at Bonhams.
The most spectacular discovery, however, was a cache of some 800 jade objects.
What they found last week was a complete surprise: a tomb dating back more than 2,000 years with a cache of almost perfectly preserved ceramic and bronze funerary objects, including cremation urns for more than two dozen people.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com