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box
1[ boks ]
noun
- a container, case, or receptacle, usually rectangular, of wood, metal, cardboard, etc., and often with a lid or removable cover.
- the quantity contained in a box:
She bought a box of candy as a gift.
- Chiefly British. a gift or present:
a Christmas box.
- a compartment or section in a public place, shut or railed off for the accommodation of a small number of people, especially in a theater, opera house, sports stadium, etc.
- a small enclosure or area in a courtroom, for witnesses or the jury.
- a small shelter:
a sentry's box.
- British.
- a small house, cabin, or cottage, as for use while hunting:
a shooting box.
- a telephone booth.
- a wardrobe trunk.
- the driver's seat on a coach.
- the section of a wagon in which passengers or parcels are carried.
- Automotive. the section of a truck in which cargo is carried.
- the box, Informal. television:
Are there any good shows on the box tonight?
- part of a page of a newspaper or periodical set off in some manner, as by lines, a border, or white space.
- any enclosing, protective case or housing, sometimes including its contents:
a gear box; a fire-alarm box.
- Baseball.
- either of two marked spaces, one on each side of the plate, in which the batter stands.
- either of two marked spaces, one outside of first base and the other outside of third, where the coaches stand.
- the pitcher's mound.
- the marked space where the catcher stands.
- a difficult situation; predicament.
- Agriculture. a bowl or pit cut in the side of a tree for collecting sap.
- Jazz Slang.
- a stringed instrument, as a guitar.
- a piano.
- Informal.
- a phonograph.
- a boom box.
- a computer.
- Slang. a coffin.
- Slang: Vulgar.
- the vulva or vagina.
verb (used with object)
- to put into a box:
She boxed the glassware before the movers came.
- to enclose or confine as in a box (often followed by in or up ).
- to furnish with a box.
- to form into a box or the shape of a box.
- to block so as to keep from passing or achieving better position (often followed by in ):
The Ferrari was boxed in by two other cars on the tenth lap.
- to group together for consideration as one unit:
to box bills in the legislature.
- Building Trades. to enclose or conceal (a building or structure) as with boarding.
- Agriculture. to make a hole or cut in (a tree) for sap to collect.
- to mix (paint, varnish, or the like) by pouring from one container to another and back again.
- Australian.
- to mix groups of sheep that should be kept separated.
- to confuse someone or something.
verb phrase
- Basketball. to position oneself between an opposing player and the basket to hinder the opposing player from rebounding or tipping in a shot; block out.
box
2[ boks ]
verb (used with object)
- to fight against (someone) in a boxing match.
- to strike with the hand or fist, especially on the ear.
verb (used without object)
noun
- a blow, as with the hand or fist:
He gave the boy a box on his ear.
box
3[ boks ]
noun
- an evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Buxus, especially B. sempervirens, having shiny, elliptic, dark-green leaves, used for ornamental borders, hedges, etc., and yielding a hard, durable wood.
- the wood itself.
- any of various other shrubs or trees, especially species of eucalyptus.
box
4[ boks ]
verb (used with object)
- Nautical. to boxhaul (often followed by off ).
- Meteorology. to fly around the center of a storm in a boxlike pattern in order to gather meteorological data:
to box a storm.
box
1/ bɒks /
noun
- a dense slow-growing evergreen tree or shrub of the genus Buxus , esp B. sempervirens , which has small shiny leaves and is used for hedges, borders, and garden mazes: family Buxaceae
- the wood of this tree See boxwood
- any of several trees the timber or foliage of which resembles this tree, esp various species of Eucalyptus with rough bark
box
2/ bɒks /
noun
- a receptacle or container made of wood, cardboard, etc, usually rectangular and having a removable or hinged lid
- Also calledboxful the contents of such a receptacle or the amount it can contain
he ate a whole box of chocolates
- any of various containers for a specific purpose
letter box
a money box
- often in combination any of various small cubicles, kiosks, or shelters
a telephone box or callbox
a signal box on a railway
a sentry box
- a separate compartment in a public place for a small group of people, as in a theatre or certain restaurants
- an enclosure within a courtroom See jury box witness box
- a small country house occupied by sportsmen when following a field sport, esp shooting
- a protective housing for machinery or mechanical parts
- the contents of such a box
- ( in combination )
a gearbox
- a shaped device of light tough material worn by sportsmen to protect the genitals, esp in cricket
- a section of printed matter on a page, enclosed by lines, a border, or white space
- a central agency to which mail is addressed and from which it is collected or redistributed
a post-office box
to reply to a box number in a newspaper advertisement
- the central part of a computer or the casing enclosing it
- short for penalty box
- baseball either of the designated areas in which the batter may stand
- the raised seat on which the driver sits in a horse-drawn coach
- a wheeled container for transporting coal in a mine
- an accidental mixing of herds or flocks
- a hole cut into the base of a tree to collect the sap
- short for Christmas box
- a device for dividing water into two or more ditches in an irrigation system
- an informal name for a coffin
- taboo.the female genitals
- be a box of birdsto be very well indeed
- the box informal.television
- think outside the box or think out of the boxto think in a different, innovative, or original manner, esp with regard to business practices, products, systems, etc
- tick all the boxesto satisfy all of the apparent requirements for success
- out of the box informal.outstanding or excellent
a day out of the box
verb
- tr to put into a box
- tr; usually foll by in or up to prevent from moving freely; confine
- trfoll byin printing to enclose (text) within a ruled frame
- tr to make a cut in the base of (a tree) in order to collect the sap
- tr to mix (flocks or herds) accidentally
- trsometimes foll byup to confuse
I am all boxed up
- nautical short for boxhaul
- box the compassnautical to name the compass points in order
box
3/ bɒks /
verb
- tr to fight (an opponent) in a boxing match
- intr to engage in boxing
- tr to hit (a person) with the fist; punch or cuff
- box cleverto behave in a careful and cunning way
noun
- a punch with the fist, esp on the ear
Derived Forms
- ˈboxˌlike, adjective
Other Words From
- boxlike adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of box1
Origin of box2
Origin of box3
Word History and Origins
Origin of box1
Origin of box2
Origin of box3
Idioms and Phrases
- box the compass, Nautical. to recite all of the points of the compass in a clockwise order.
- out of the box, Australian Slang. remarkable or exceptional; extraordinary.
- outside the box, Informal. in an innovative or unconventional manner; with a fresh perspective: Also out of the box.
You have to think outside the box and adapt those strategies to your business.
More idioms and phrases containing box
- in a bind (box)
- on one's soapbox
- pandora's box
- stuff the ballot box
Example Sentences
Instead, he was joining other teachers sweeping up material from an early morning fire underneath the stadium bleachers that severely damaged the press box.
Humans have long used slow breathing to regulate their emotions, and practices like yoga and mindfulness have even popularized formal techniques like box breathing.
That can make a loss at the ballot box feel like a personal defeat, she said.
He told Fox News it was a "Pandora's box" because Putin's isolation would increase the pressure on him.
Then, unexpectedly, he agreed to talk to us at the boxing gym in Puerto Rico that he co-owns with his brother.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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