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box office
1noun
- the office of a theater, stadium, or the like, at which tickets are sold.
- Theater.
- receipts from a play or other entertainment.
- entertainment popular enough to attract paying audiences and make a profit:
This show will be good box office.
box-office
2[ boks-aw-fis, -of-is ]
adjective
- of or relating to the box office or to the business and commercial aspects of the theater:
a box-office window; box-office receipts; a box-office attraction.
box office
noun
- an office at a theatre, cinema, etc, where tickets are sold
- the receipts from a play, film, etc
- the public appeal of an actor or production
the musical was bad box office
- ( as modifier )
a box-office success
Word History and Origins
Origin of box office1
Origin of box office2
Example Sentences
And with a projected opening weekend domestic box office haul of $120 million, that adds up to quite a bit of patience.
Universal Pictures’ “Wicked” and Paramount Pictures’ “Gladiator II” are expected to post gravity-defying numbers at the domestic box office this weekend.
Warner Bros. did not report box office figures for “Juror #2,” which reportedly played in only a few dozen U.S. cinemas.
Propelled by a strong box office performance by “Deadpool & Wolverine” and profits in streaming, Walt Disney Co. reported strong fourth-quarter results.
And so far, these decades-later legacy sequels — or “lega-sequels” — have helped boost a box office still recovering from the pandemic and fewer big titles due to last year’s dual Hollywood strikes.
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