From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishsachetsach‧et /ˈsæʃeɪ $ sæˈʃeɪ/ noun [countable] 1 D British English a small plastic or paper package containing a liquid or powder SYN packet American Englishsachet of a sachet of shampoo2 a small bag containing dried herbs or flowers that smell pleasant a lavender sachet
Examples from the Corpus
sachet• Warm it up, add four sachets of gelatin and stir until it's all dissolved.• Single rupee sachets comprise about 70 per cent of the company's shampoo sales.• Each pack contains six sachets of soluble granules which mix with water to make pleasant citrus flavour drinks.• Special sachets of aquatic plant fertilizer are currently available which can be merely pushed into the container beside the plants.• That is why the sachet I have sent you is so important.• The sachets of white pills were locked away in the school secretary's cupboard.From Longman Business Dictionarysachetsach‧et /ˈsæʃeɪsæˈʃeɪ/ noun [countable] a small plastic or paper package containing a product in liquid or powder formOrigin sachet (1400-1500) French sac; → SAC