geocache

English

Etymology

geo- + cache

Noun

geocache (plural geocaches)

  1. A container hidden in a specific location during geocaching.
    • 2006, Michael Purvis, Jeffrey Sambells, Cameron Turner, Beginning Google Maps Applications with PHP and Ajax: From Novice to Professional, page 32,
      The treasures in this case are geocaches, those little plastic boxes of goodies that are hidden all over the earth.
    • 2006, National Science Teachers Association, Illinois Association of Chemistry Teachers, American Science Teachers Association, The Science Teacher, Volume 73, Issues 1-4, page 56,
      Latitude and longitude coordinates for the location of these hidden geocaches are downloaded from the internet (at sites such as www. geocaching.com) and loaded on a GPS receiver.
    • 2010, Doug Ohman, Chris Niskanen, Prairie, Lake, Forest: Minnesota's State Parks, page 102,
      With school out for the summer, Jason and Sarah sat down and mapped a strategy to find the geocaches at each of the state's seventy-two parks and recreation areas.

Translations

Verb

geocache (third-person singular simple present geocaches, present participle geocaching, simple past and past participle geocached)

  1. (intransitive) To participate in geocaching.
    • 2004, Mike Dyer, The Essential Guide to Geocaching: Tracking Treasure with Your GPS, page 68:
      Those who have never geocached assume that it must be a really easy game;
    • 2006, Margot Anne Kelley, Local Treasures: Geocaching Across America, page 142:
      And, in line with the third preference that Kahn observed, nearly all of the places I've geocached have been easy to navigate (and would have been easy even without a GPS).
    • 2010, Paul Gillin, Dana Gillin, The Joy of Geocaching: How to Find Health, Happiness and Creative Energy Through a Worldwide Treasure Hunt, page 131,
      The team, which has more than 68000 finds between them, geocached across all 50 U.S. states in just 10 days.
  2. (transitive) To hide or seek a geocache.

Translations

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