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单词 box
释义

box

See also: Box and b'ox

English

WOTD – 26 December 2018

Pronunciation

A Rococo snuff box/tabatière (sense 1.1), made between 1761 and 1762
A cat sitting in a cardboard delivery box (sense 1.1)
Post office boxes in Wan Chai Post Office, Hong Kong
A box (sense 1.5) or loge in the Semperoper in Dresden, Germany
A soldier of Hans Majestet Kongens Garde (His Majesty the King’s Guard) in front of a sentry box (sense 1.7) at the Royal Palace in Oslo, Norway
A box (sense 1.21) used to register on target and off target hits in electric fencing
An animation of a box (sense 2.4) in juggling
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /bɒks/
  • (General American) enPR: bäks, IPA(key): /bɑks/
  • (file)
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɒks

Etymology 1

From Middle English box (container, box, cup), from Old English box (box-tree; box, case),[1] from Proto-West Germanic *buhs (box tree; thing made from boxwood; box), either from Latin buxus (box tree; thing made from boxwood), buxum (box tree; boxwood) (possibly from πύξος (púxos, box tree; boxwood)); or from Late Latin buxis (box), Latin pyxis (small box for medicines or toiletries) (from Ancient Greek πυξίς (puxís, box or tablet made of boxwood; box; cylinder), from πύξος (púxos) + -ῐς (-is, suffix forming feminine nouns)).[2] Doublet of pyx.

If the latter derivation is correct, the word is cognate with Middle Dutch bosse, busse (jar; tin; round box) (modern Dutch bos (wood, forest), bus (container, box; bushing of a wheel)), Old High German buhsa (Middle High German buhse, bühse, modern German Büchse (box; can)), Swedish hjulbössa (wheel-box).[2]

The humorous plural form boxen is from box + -en, by analogy with oxen.

Noun

box (plural boxes or (nonstandard, computing, humorous) boxen)

  1. Senses relating to a three-dimensional object or space.
    1. A cuboid space; a cuboid container, often with a hinged lid.
      Synonyms: case, package
      • 1843 December 19, Charles Dickens, “Stave Two. The First of the Three Spirits.”, in A Christmas Carol. In Prose. Being a Ghost Story of Christmas, London: Chapman & Hall, [], OCLC 55746801, page 55:
        A terrible voice in the hall cried, "Bring down Master Scrooge's box, there!" and in the hall appeared the schoolmaster himself, who glared on Master Scrooge with a ferocious condescension, and threw him into a dreadful state of mind by shaking hands with him.
      • 1963, Margery Allingham, “The Elopers”, in The China Governess: A Mystery, London: Chatto & Windus, OCLC 483591931, page 33:
        The huge square box, parquet-floored and high-ceilinged, had been arranged to display a suite of bedroom furniture designed and made in the halcyon days of the last quarter of the nineteenth century, when modish taste was just due to go clean out of fashion for the best part of the next hundred years.
    2. A cuboid container and its contents; as much as fills such a container.
      Synonym: boxful
      a box of books
      • 1719 April 25, [Daniel Defoe], The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, [], 3rd edition, London: [] W[illiam] Taylor [], published 1719, OCLC 838630407, page 325:
        He brought me also a Box of Sugar, a Box of Flour, a Bag full of Lemons, and two Bottles of Lime-juice, and abundance of other Things: []
    3. A compartment (as a drawer) of an item of furniture used for storage, such as a cupboard, a shelf, etc.
    4. A compartment or receptacle for receiving items.
      post box  post office box
      • 2015 March, Cindy Gerard, chapter 10, in Running Blind, 1st Pocket Books paperback edition, New York, N.Y.: Pocket Books, →ISBN, page 73:
        She'd picked up the high-tech phone from a post office box in Toronto a month ago. The key to that box had been mailed to a post office box in New York City. The Russians loved their cloak-and-dagger, particularly former KGB and Spetsnaz, Soviet special forces who ran the mafia, []
      1. A numbered receptacle at a newspaper office for anonymous replies to advertisements; see also box number.
        • 1924 December 1, “The Broadcaster: A Department that will Find what You Want: A Central Clearing House for All Your Business Wants”, in C. A. Musselman, editor, Automobile Trade Journal, volume XXIX, number 6, Philadelphia, Pa.: Chilton Company, [], OCLC 58938924, page 618, column 2:
          Add five words for address if replies are to come to a box number address at any of our offices. These replies are forwarded each day as received, in new envelopes at no extra charge. [] When replying to blind ads be careful to put on your envelope the correct box number and do not enclose original letters of recommendation—send copies.
    5. A compartment to sit inside in an auditorium, courtroom, theatre, or other building.
      Synonym: loge
      • 1767, [Francesco] Algarotti, “On the Structure of Theatres”, in An Essay on the Opera Written in Italian, London: Printed for L. Davis and C. Reymers, OCLC 228750638, pages 101–102:
        There is yet a better manner of arranging the boxes; and for which invention we are indebted to Andrea Sighizzi, the ſcholar of [Francesco] Brizio and Dentone; [] The plan he followed was, that the boxes, according as they were to be removed from the ſtage towards the bottom of the theatre, ſhould continue gradually riſing by ſome inches one above the other, and gradually receding to the ſides by ſome inches; by which means, every box would have a more commodious view of the ſtage; []
    6. The driver's seat on a horse-drawn coach.
      Synonym: box seat
      • 1868 April 18, “Among Russian Peasantry”, in Charles Dickens, editor, All the Year Round. A Weekly Journal. [...] With which is Incorporated Household Words, volume XIX, number 469, London: Published at No. 26, Wellington Street; and by Messrs. Chapman and Hall, []], OCLC 781591950, page 440, column 1:
        Next in importance to the Dvornik comes the coachman of a Russian household. He is usually chosen for his fatness and the length of his beard. These seem curious reasons for choosing a coachman in a country where coach-boxes are smaller than anywhere else in the world; but whereas the average breadth of a Russian coach-box is scarcely more than twelve inches at the outside, the average breadth of a Russian coachman is a very different affair.
    7. A small rectangular shelter.
      Synonyms: shelter, booth
      sentry-box
      • 1762, [Laurence Sterne], chapter XXII, in The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, volume VI, London: [] T. Becket and P. A. Dehondt, [], OCLC 959921544, page 95:
        [M]y uncle Toby [] treated himſelf with a handſome ſentry-box, to ſtand at the corner of the bowling-green, betwixt which point and the foot of the glacis, there was left a little kind of eſplanade for him and the corporal to confer and hold councils of war upon. / —The ſentry-box was in caſe of rain.
    8. Short for horsebox (container for transporting horses).
      • 1877, Anna Sewell, “Earlshall”, in Black Beauty: [], London: Jarrold and Sons, [], OCLC 228733457, part II, page 101:
        He was a fine-looking middle-aged man, and his voice said at once that he expected to be obeyed. He was very friendly and polite to John, and after giving us a slight look, he called a groom to take us to our boxes, and invited John to take some refreshment.
    9. (automotive) Short for gearbox.
      • 2000, Bob Foster, Birdum or Bust!, Henley Beach, SA: Seaview Press, page 181:
        They were capable of climbing most hills in second low but for this exercise we decided to go for the bottom of the box, just to be sure.
    10. (rail transport) Short for signal box.
      • 1960 March, “Talking of Trains: The Slough derailment”, in Trains Illustrated, page 132:
        Sparks from the derailed bogie of the train were first noticed by the signalman at Slough West box, who immediately sent to Slough Middle box the "Stop and Examine" signal, followed at once by "Obstruction Danger" when he realised that the coach was derailed.
    11. (figuratively) A predicament or trap.
      I’m really in a box now.
      • 2000, Dee Henderson, chapter 5, in True Devotion (Uncommon Heroes; book 1), Sisters, Or.: Palisades, →ISBN; republished Carol Stream, Ill.: Tyndale House Publishers, 2005, →ISBN, page 67:
        He was going straight for the jugular. "Joe, this didn't make me afraid. I've done rescues before." / "Then you'll have no problem saying yes." / Her eyes narrowed. He was putting her in a box and doing it deliberately. There were times when his kind of leadership made her cringe.
    12. (slang) A prison cell.
      • 1951, William S. Burroughs, in Harris (ed.), Letters 1945–59, Penguin 2009, p. 98:
        While sojourning in the box I was greatly impressed by the kindness and decency of the Mexican people.
      1. (slang) A cell used for solitary confinement.
        Synonym: hole
        • 2003, Elayne Rapping, Law and Justice as Seen on TV (page 83)
          He is fearless and contemptuous, apparently able to withstand any discipline—including nights “in the box []
        • 2009, Megan McLemore, Barred from Treatment
          He had been in disciplinary confinement (“the box”)—punishment reserved for serious prison offenses—for 14 months.
        • 2020, Erin Hatton, Coerced: Work Under Threat of Punishment (page 89)
          [] he explained, “you can go to the box. So, I got a ticket for refusing an order and I went to the box in that situation. []
    13. (euphemistic) A coffin.
      • 2010 March 6, Pauline Rogers, interviewee, “Soldier who lost both legs in Afghanistan wants to return to frontline”, in The Telegraph, London, archived from the original on 24 May 2010:
        Prior to the explosion we spoke about what would happen if he [Lance-Corporal James Simpson] died and came back in a box and what music he would want at his funeral.
    14. (slang) Preceded by the: television.
      Synonyms: (Britain) telly, tube, TV
      • 1988, Roald Dahl, “The Ghost”, in Matilda, London: Jonathan Cape, →ISBN; republished as “The Ghost”, in Matilda, New York, N.Y.: Puffin Books, 2007, →ISBN:
        Mr. Wormwood switched on the television. The screen lit up. The programme blared. Mr Wormwood glared at Matilda. She hadn't moved. She had somehow trained herself by now to block her ears to the ghastly sound of the dreaded box. She kept right on reading, and for some reason this infuriated the father.
    15. (slang, vulgar) The vagina.
      Synonyms: see Thesaurus:vagina
      • 2015 March, Allison Hobbs; Karen E. Quinones Miller, “Cheryl”, in Hittin’ It Out the Park: A Novel (Zane Presents), trade paperback edition, Largo, Md.: Strebor Books, →ISBN, page 27:
        Without warning, he withdrew his finger and drove his tongue inside her creamy, hot box. She gave a sharp intake of breath.
    16. (computing, slang) A computer, or the case in which it is housed.
      Synonyms: computer, machine; see also Thesaurus:computer
      a UNIX box
      • 1996 January 15, Siu Ha Vivian Chu, “DEC vt320 → linux boxen”, in comp.os.linux.networking, Usenet, message-ID <4dceos$gg7@morgoth.sfu.ca>:
        i can't seem to find any how-to regarding connecting a terminal to a linux boxen via parallel port …
      • 2002 September 8, Gregory Seidman, “serving debian to redhat boxen”, in muc.lists.debian.user, Usenet, message-ID <20020908205128.GA19944@cs.brown.edu>:
        Furthermore, it is necessary that all four Linux boxen have the same development environment []
    17. (slang) A gym dedicated to the CrossFit exercise program.
      • 2014 August 8, Courtney Rubin, “CrossFit Flirting: Talk Burpee to Me”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 2022-06-16:
        Joshua Newman, until last month a co-owner of CrossFit NYC, which says it is the world's largest box, recalled a member in the gym's early days who was nicknamed "Welcoming Committee."
      • 2017 June 24, Julie Beck, “How CrossFit Acts Like a Religion”, in The Atlantic, archived from the original on 2022-12-25:
        Ter Kuile says people will sometimes bring their kids to their CrossFit "box," which is CrossFit for "gym."
      • 2018 June 21, Mark Hay, “Some CrossFit Gyms Feature Pictures of These Puking, Bleeding Clowns”, in VICE, archived from the original on 2022-09-30:
        Even CrossFitters disagree on how to read the clowns; some box owners join outsider critics in condemning them as dangerous and distance themselves from boxes that still display them.
      • 2021 August 22, Michael Segalov, quoting Joel Dommett, “Sunday with Joel Dommett: ‘In bed until 10am if I'm feeling fruity'”, in The Guardian, archived from the original on 2022-11-29:
        This is really sad, but I'd go to this amazing CrossFit box called Tio with barbells outside on the edge of a park so you can enjoy the sunshine. I'd go with friends, we'd play loud music, lift weights and get tanned.
    18. (cricket) A hard protector for the genitals worn inside the underpants by a batsman or close fielder.
      Synonym: (US) cup
      • 2011, John Duncan, “Rory Bremner”, in Cricket Wonderful Cricket, London: John Blake Publishing, →ISBN:
        His [Rory Bremner's] brilliant story about having his box turned inside out by a delivery from Jeff Thomson – he contrasts it with Andrew Flintoff being hit in the box by Cardigan Connor. [David] Lloyd came up to Flintoff, and said, "Cardigan Connor? You consider it an honour to be hit by Cardigan. Do you remember Jeff Thomson? I was hit amidships by him, and it was not a glancing blow. I was wearing one of those old boxes – you know, the pink ones, like a soap dish. It ended up that everything that was supposed to be inside the box had come outside the box – through the air holes!"
    19. (cricket) Synonym of gully (a certain fielding position)
    20. (engineering) A cylindrical casing around the axle of a wheel, a bearing, a gland, etc.
      • 1844, Thomas Webster; assisted by the late Mrs. [William] Parkes, “[Book XXIII. Carriages.] Chap. VI. Various Details Respecting the Parts of a Carriage.”, in An Encyclopædia of Domestic Economy: [], London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, [], OCLC 458895446, paragraph 6684, page 1124:
        In common axles, the wheel is prevented from coming off by a pin, called the linch pin, passing through the end of the axletree arm, the name of the part that the wheel turns upon; but as many serious accidents have happened through the linch pin failing and the wheel coming off, an improved method of securing the latter is now practised, by means of a box called the axletree box, which is contrived to answer the double purpose of keeping on the wheel, and to hold oil, grease, or some lubricating substance for lessening the friction.
    21. (fencing) A device used in electric fencing to detect whether a weapon has struck an opponent, which connects to a fencer's weapon by a spool and body wire. It uses lights and sound to notify a hit, with different coloured lights for on target and off target hits.
      • 2009, Suzanne Slade, “Electric Fencing: Get Hooked Up”, in Fencing for Fun!, Mankato, Minn.: Compass Point Books, →ISBN, pages 30–31:
        In electric fencing, foil and saber fencers wear lames, which are thin outer jackets that cover their target areas. Lames are made from fabric that conducts electricity. When a fencer touches an opponent's lame with his or her blade, an electronic signal is sent to the scoring box. A colored light goes on to signal a touch. [] In épée, the whole body is the target, so épée fencers do not need to wear lames. A signal is sent to the scoring box from the épée any time a touch is made.
    22. (dated) A small country house.
      • 1782, Frances Burney, Cecilia, III.vi.9:
        “I dare say the sheriff, or the mayor and corporation, or some of those sort of people, would give him money enough, for the use of it, to run him up a mighty pretty neat little box somewhere near Richmond.”
      • 1782, William Cowper, “Retirement”, in Poems, London: [] J[oseph] Johnson, [], OCLC 1029672464, page 282:
        Suburban villas, highway-ſide retreats, / That dread th' encroachment of our growing ſtreets, / Tight boxes, neatly ſaſh'd, and in a blaze / With all a July ſun's collected rays, / Delight the citizen, who gaſping there, / Breathes clouds of duſt and calls it country air.
      • [1840?], [John Mackay] Wilson, “The Runaway”, in Wilson’s Historical, Traditionary, and Imaginative Tales of the Borders, and of Scotland: [], volume VI, number 273, Manchester: Published by James Ainsworth, []; London: E. T. Brain & Co., []; New York, N.Y.: R. T. Shannon, OCLC 504620539, page 97:
        What can a man know of a country or its people, who, merely passes through the former in a stage coach? [] Such were the arguments by which I induced myself to undertake a pedestrian trip to join my friend at his shooting-box, some hundred and fifty miles from Carlisle, where I had arrived from London; business compelling me to take that route.
    23. (colloquial, chiefly Southern US) A stringed instrument with a soundbox, especially a guitar. [from 20th c.]
      • 1937, Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Amistad 2013, p. 123:
        So Tea Cake took the guitar and played himself. He was glad of the chance because he hadn't had his hand on a box since he put his in the pawn shop to get some money to hire a car for Janie soon after he met her.
  2. Senses relating to a two-dimensional object or space
    1. A rectangle: an oblong or a square.
      Place a tick in the box.
      This text would stand out better if we put it in a coloured box.
      • 2009, Natalie M[yra] Rosinsky, “Setting the Scene”, in Write Your Own Graphic Novel, Mankato, Minn.: Compass Point Books, →ISBN, page 16:
        [G]raphic novelists must think "inside the box" in some significant ways. Like comic books, each page of a graphic novel usually displays from one to nine outlined boxes with pictures and words that tell a story. Another tradition places the descriptions of events or scenes in smaller rectangles set within panels. These rectangles are called narrative boxes. [] Use narrative boxes with words such as "Far away" or "Meanwhile" to tell readers when you are moving the action somewhere else.
    2. (baseball) The rectangle in which the batter stands.
      • 2003, Jim Puhalla; Jeff Krans; Mike Goatley, “Soil”, in Baseball and Softball Fields: Design, Construction, Renovation, and Maintenance, Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, part I (Design and Construction), section 3.3c, page 64:
        As anyone who has ever maintained a baseball or softball diamond would agree, the pitcher's mound and batter's box present a special challenge. [] Batters dig in at the plate, disturbing the soil and making a hole that base runners must slide across when they approach the plate. To withstand the special stresses on these areas, only clay-based soils provide the necessary soil strength. [] [S]ome manufacturers have introduced clay-based soil products for pitcher's mounds and batter's boxes. These products include additives with special binding properties and are specifically designed to resist the stresses applied by the cleats of pitchers and batters.
    3. (genetics) One of two specific regions in a promoter.
      • 1990, David De Pomerai, “Gene Organisation and Control”, in From Gene to Animal: An Introduction to the Molecular Biology of Animal Development, 2nd edition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, section 1.3 (Transcriptional Control), page 11:
        Similar considerations apply in the case of tRNA genes, where the internal promoter is split into two functional domains (box A and box B) which must be a minimum distance apart []. The first 11 bp of the internal control region in the Xenopus 5S gene are structurally and functionally homologous to the box A element of tRNA gene promoters, []
    4. (juggling) A pattern usually performed with three balls where the movements of the balls make a boxlike shape.
      • 2010 April, Michael J. Gelb, 5 Keys to High Performance: Juggle Your Way to Success, [Prince Frederick, Md.]: Gildan Digital, →ISBN, part III (The Art of Juggling: Expanding Your Influence with Spheres):
        Your hands rest on the bottom plane of the box, relaxed and open; forearms are parallel with the ground and elbows close to your body. Balls thrown from your right hand are aimed at the point to the left of center of the top of the box. When you hit this point the ball will land in your left hand. Balls thrown from your left hand are aimed at the point to the right of center of the top of the box.
    5. (lacrosse, informal) Short for box lacrosse (indoor form of lacrosse).
      • 2003, John Crossingham, “The Essentials” and “Goaltending”, in Bobbie Kalman, editor, Lacrosse in Action (Sports in Action), New York, N.Y.; St. Catharines, Ont.: Crabtree Publishing Company, →ISBN, pages 12 and 30:
        [page 12] Field players wear shoes with short spikes, called cleats, on the soles. Box players wear court shoes, which have grooved rubber soles. [] [page 30] Field goalies have larger nets to protect than goalies in box lacrosse have. Box goalies wear more pads.
    6. (soccer) The penalty area.
      • 2010 December 29, Chris Whyatt, “Chelsea 1 – 0 Bolton”, in BBC Sport, archived from the original on 16 December 2017:
        Poised link-up play between [Michael] Essien and [Frank] Lampard set the Ghanaian midfielder free soon after but his left-footed shot from outside the box was too weak.
    7. (aviation) A diamond-shaped flying formation consisting of four aircraft.
Usage notes
  • (computing): the humorous plural form boxen is occasionally used.
Hyponyms
Hyponyms of box (noun, etymology 1)
  • airbox
  • apple-box
  • ballot box
  • bandbox
  • bento box
  • bitty box
  • black box
  • blue box
  • brain box
  • CAAT box
  • cable box
  • call box
  • cambox
  • cardboard box
  • cashbox
  • check box
  • Chinese boxes
  • Christmas box
  • cigar box
  • collecting box
  • combo box
  • coolbox
  • dialog box
  • dogbox
  • drink box
  • dropbox
  • embox
  • firebox
  • fishing box
  • front box
  • fusebox
  • fuzz box
  • gate box
  • GC box
  • gearbox
  • glory box
  • glove box
  • Goldberg-Hogness box
  • grass box
  • hatbox
  • haybox
  • hellbox
  • Hogness box
  • homeobox
  • homoeobox
  • horsebox
  • horse box
  • hot box
  • hotbox
  • hunting box
  • icebox
  • idiot box
  • inbox
  • jewel box
  • journal box
  • juice box
  • jump box
  • jury box
  • letterbox
  • light box
  • list box
  • lockbox
  • loose box
  • loosebox
  • love box
  • lunch box
  • magic box
  • marmalade box
  • matchbox
  • miter box
  • mitre box
  • money box
  • mud box
  • musical box
  • nest box, nesting box
  • omnibus box
  • outbox
  • packing box
  • paint box
  • pay box
  • peg-box
  • pegbox
  • penalty box
  • pepperbox
  • phone box
  • pillar box
  • pillbox
  • playbox
  • PO box
  • police box
  • poor box
  • postbox
  • power box
  • presentation box
  • press box
  • property box
  • puff box
  • rattlebox
  • safe-deposit box
  • safety-deposit box
  • saltbox
  • sandbox
  • saucebox
  • search box
  • seatbox
  • seedbox
  • sentry box
  • set-top box
  • shoebox
  • shooting box
  • side box
  • signal box
  • six-yard box
  • Skinner box
  • skybox
  • slushbox
  • smokebox
  • snow box
  • snuffbox
  • soapbox
  • sound box
  • spitbox
  • spurious box
  • squawk box
  • squawkbox
  • squeezebox
  • stage box
  • strongbox
  • stuffing box
  • suggestion box
  • swear box
  • sweatbox
  • swell box
  • telephone box
  • text box
  • tick box
  • tinder box
  • toolbox
  • tuck box
  • tumbling box
  • upper box
  • vanity box
  • versing box
  • wagon box
  • wine box
  • witness box
  • workbox
  • yogibogeybox
Derived terms
  • 18-yard box
  • About box
  • a few spanners short of a tool box
  • agony box
  • air-box
  • airbox
  • apple box
  • apple-box
  • Armalite and the ballot box
  • ask box
  • axle box, axlebox, axle-box
  • baby box
  • bait box
  • Balaam box
  • balikbayan box
  • bandbox
  • bathing box
  • batter's box
  • beach box
  • beatbox
  • beige box
  • be in a box
  • be in the same box
  • be in the wrong box
  • bidding box
  • big box
  • big-box
  • bike box
  • bio box
  • black-box function
  • black-box testing
  • black box warning
  • blind box
  • blotto box
  • boom box
  • box and cox
  • box and lock
  • box and needle
  • box and whisker plot
  • box and whiskers plot
  • box-anneal
  • box-annealing
  • box art
  • box-back
  • boxball
  • box-barrage
  • box-beam
  • box-bed
  • box bed
  • box-bill
  • boxboard
  • box-board
  • box boy
  • box braids
  • box breathing
  • box calf
  • box-calf
  • box camera
  • box canyon
  • box-canyon
  • box car
  • boxcar
  • box-car
  • box-cart
  • box-chronometer
  • box-churn
  • box-cloth
  • box-club
  • box coat
  • box-coil
  • box-colored
  • box-coloured
  • box-coupling
  • box crab
  • box cutter
  • box-cutter
  • box-day
  • box-desk
  • box-drain
  • box-drawing character
  • box-elder
  • box elder maple
  • boxen
  • box end wrench
  • boxer
  • box-feeding
  • box file
  • boxfish
  • box-fitter
  • box-food
  • box frame
  • box-fresh
  • boxful
  • box gable
  • box girder
  • box-grain
  • box-groove
  • box guitar
  • box-hand
  • box Harry
  • box-hat
  • box-head, boxhead
  • box hockey
  • box-hook
  • box-house
  • box house
  • box iron
  • box-iron
  • box jelly
  • box jellyfish
  • box joint
  • box junction
  • boxkeeper
  • box-keeperess
  • box-key
  • box kick
  • box kite
  • box lacrosse
  • box-letter
  • box-level
  • box level
  • box-like, boxlike
  • box-lobby
  • boxlock
  • box-loom
  • box lunch
  • box lyre
  • box magazine
  • boxmaker
  • boxmaking
  • box man
  • box-man
  • box-master
  • box-mattress
  • box meal
  • box-meat
  • box-metal
  • box model
  • box-money
  • box-motion
  • box no.
  • box number
  • box-nut
  • box of birds
  • box of chocolates
  • box of dildos
  • box-office
  • box office
  • box-office bomb
  • box of fluffies
  • box of fluffy ducks
  • box of ivories
  • box of matches
  • box of tricks
  • box operator
  • box-ottoman
  • box-oyster
  • box-plan
  • box pleat
  • box-pleated
  • box-pleating
  • box plot
  • box poison
  • box profits
  • box-rent
  • box room
  • boxroom
  • box score
  • box-sealing tape
  • box seat
  • box set
  • box-shutter
  • box-slater
  • box-sleigh
  • box social
  • box spanner
  • box split
  • box spread
  • box-spring
  • box spring
  • box-square
  • box-stair
  • box-staircase
  • box stall
  • box standard
  • box-standard
  • box-staple
  • box step
  • box-stone
  • box-strap
  • box-string
  • box supper
  • box-swivel
  • box-tail
  • box tail
  • box-tappet
  • box-tenon
  • box the gnat
  • box-ticking
  • box-timbering
  • box-to-box midfielder
  • box-toe
  • box-tool
  • boxtop
  • box-tortoise
  • box-trap
  • box tree moth
  • box-tricycle
  • box-turtle
  • box turtle
  • box-valve
  • box van
  • box wagon
  • box-wallah
  • box wine
  • box wrench, box-wrench
  • boxy
  • box zither
  • brain-box
  • brainbox
  • bread box
  • breadbox
  • brown box
  • brown box crab
  • busy box
  • butter-box
  • call-box
  • cannon box
  • cardboard-box
  • cartridge-box
  • cartridge box
  • cash box
  • cash-box
  • cashbox
  • cat box
  • chalk box
  • charity box
  • chatterbox
  • checkbox
  • cheese-box
  • cheese box
  • Chinese box
  • chocolate box
  • chocolate-box
  • Christmas box
  • Christmas Eve box
  • cigar box guitar
  • cigar box guitarist
  • clack box
  • clack-box
  • coach box
  • coachbox
  • coachbox
  • coal-box
  • coin-box
  • coin box
  • cold meat box
  • collection box
  • color-box
  • colour-box
  • combat box
  • comb-box
  • combobox
  • come from a Cracker Jack box
  • commentary box
  • confession box
  • convergence box
  • cooking box
  • coolbox
  • cool box
  • Cornell box
  • country box
  • coupling-box
  • court poor box
  • cox box
  • cracker-box
  • crash box
  • dead-letter box
  • deed-box
  • despatch box
  • dialogue box
  • dice-box
  • dice box
  • dicebox
  • dig box
  • Digi-box
  • digital converter box
  • dirt-box
  • dispatch-box
  • dispatch box
  • ditty-box
  • ditty box
  • dog-box
  • dogbox
  • dragbox
  • dredge-box
  • dredging box
  • dredging-box
  • dressing-box
  • dressing-up box
  • driving-box
  • dropbox
  • drop-box
  • drop box
  • dumb as a box of rocks
  • dumber than a box of rocks
  • dust box
  • dust-box
  • egg-box
  • embox
  • error box
  • farebox, fare box
  • fart box
  • F-box
  • feed-box
  • feeding-box
  • feelie box
  • feely box
  • firebox
  • fire-box
  • fire box
  • first-aid box
  • floor box
  • flower box
  • flush-box
  • fly box
  • fly-box
  • fox in the box
  • fudge box
  • funnel box
  • fusebox
  • fuse box
  • fuzz box
  • gearbox
  • get one's shine box
  • glory-box
  • glovebox
  • goggle-box
  • goggle box
  • gold box
  • grab box
  • gray-box testing
  • green box
  • grey-box testing
  • grockle box
  • grockle-box
  • group box
  • happy as a box of birds
  • hatbox
  • haybox
  • haybox
  • heijunka box
  • hellbox
  • hit-box
  • homeobox
  • honesty box
  • horse-box
  • horsebox
  • hotbox
  • hug-box
  • hug box
  • hum-box
  • ice box
  • icebox
  • in a box
  • in-a-box
  • in-box
  • inbox
  • infinity box
  • inside the box
  • jack-in-the-box
  • jaw-box
  • jazz box
  • jewel-box
  • jewelry box
  • jockey box
  • juke box
  • jukebox
  • junction box
  • karaoke box
  • knife-box
  • knock box
  • knock out of the box
  • knowledge-box
  • letter-box
  • letter box
  • letterbox
  • lick-box
  • life is like a box of chocolates
  • litter box
  • live box
  • lobster box
  • lockbox
  • loose-box
  • loot box
  • lunch-box
  • lunchbox
  • mad as a box of frogs
  • magenta box
  • mail box
  • mailbox
  • mail-box
  • matchbox
  • mauve box
  • memory box
  • missionary-box
  • mite box
  • mold box
  • moneybox
  • moss-box
  • moving box
  • multi-box
  • multi box
  • munchie box
  • munchy box
  • muscle-box
  • music-box
  • music box
  • nest-box
  • not the sharpest crayon in the box
  • not the sharpest tool in the box
  • off one's box
  • olive box
  • one out of the box
  • open box
  • open Pandora's box
  • out-box
  • out-of-box experience
  • out of one's box
  • out-of-the-box
  • out of the box
  • outside the box
  • paddle-box
  • paddle box
  • paintbox
  • Pandora's box
  • pass box
  • patch box
  • patch-box
  • pattern box
  • P-box
  • peg-box
  • pegbox
  • pencil box
  • pepperbox
  • permutation box
  • picture box
  • pillar-box
  • pillar-box red
  • pill-box
  • pillow box
  • pine box
  • pizza box
  • planter box
  • play-box
  • plumber's box
  • poison at the box office
  • poke box
  • postal box
  • post-box
  • post-office box
  • potato-box
  • pounce-box
  • pouncet-box
  • powder box
  • powder-box
  • prattle-box
  • press-box
  • Pribnow box
  • private box
  • project box
  • prompt-box
  • prompter's box
  • puff-box
  • purple box
  • put someone in a box
  • puzzle box
  • rainbow box
  • rattlebox
  • resistance-box
  • resistance box
  • resonance box
  • rip box
  • rose box
  • safe deposit box
  • saltbox
  • salt-box
  • salt box
  • sandbox
  • sand box
  • saucebox
  • savings-box
  • S-box
  • scent-box
  • Schumer box
  • screw box
  • seedbox
  • seed-box
  • sell against the box
  • service box
  • set top box
  • shadow box
  • shatter box
  • shoebox
  • shoe-box
  • shoe box
  • show-box
  • show box
  • shruti box
  • shut the box
  • shuttle box
  • shuttle-box
  • side-box
  • skybox
  • sluice box
  • sluice-box
  • slushbox
  • smokebox
  • smoke-box
  • snake-in-the-box problem
  • sneeze-box
  • snuff box
  • snuff-box
  • snuff box sea bean
  • soap box
  • soapbox
  • soap-box
  • soundbox
  • speak-box
  • spice-box
  • spider box
  • spit box
  • spitbox
  • spitting box
  • squawk-box
  • squawk box
  • squeeze box, squeezebox
  • sruti box
  • strongbox
  • strum box
  • stuffing-box
  • stuff the ballot box
  • subscription box
  • sugar-box
  • swap box
  • sweatbox
  • sweat box
  • sweat-box
  • talk box
  • tar-box
  • TATA box
  • T-box
  • tee-box
  • tee box
  • tell-box
  • textbox
  • the box they're going to bury it in
  • thunderbox, thunder-box
  • tick all the boxes
  • tickey box
  • tickey-box
  • ticky box
  • ticky-box
  • time box
  • tinderbox
  • tinder-box
  • tobacco-box
  • toby box
  • toe box
  • toolbox
  • touch-box
  • traffic signal box
  • tucker-box
  • tucker box
  • tumbling-box
  • unbox
  • urine box
  • vanity-box
  • vaulting box
  • veg box
  • vegetable box
  • violet box
  • voice box
  • voice-box
  • watch-box
  • water box
  • weather-box
  • weather box
  • weigh-box
  • white-box testing
  • whole box and dice
  • whole box of tricks
  • window-box
  • window box
  • witness-box
  • work-box
  • workbox
  • writing-box
  • Yankee cheese-box
  • yellow box
  • Yerkes discrimination box
  • yogibogeybox
  • zoom box
  • δ-box
Descendants
Translations
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
See also
  • tofu (empty box displayed by some computer systems in place of a character not supported by available fonts)

Verb

box (third-person singular simple present boxes, present participle boxing, simple past and past participle boxed)

  1. (transitive) To place inside a box; to pack in one or more boxes.
    • 1991 August, Karen Motylewski, “Surveying Your Own Institution: What Do You Need to Know?”, in What an Institution Can Do to Survey Its Own Preservation Needs (Technical Leaflet: General Preservation; 508-470-1010), Andover, Mass.: Northeast Document Conservation Center, OCLC 25808350, section V.D.6 (Scrapbooks and Ephemera), page 21; reprinted in Sherry Byrne, Collection Maintenance and Improvement (Preservation Planning Program), Washington, D.C.: Association of Research Libraries, 1993, →ISBN, page 87:
      Scrapbooks that have enduring value in their original form should be individually boxed in custom-fitted boxes.
    • 2017, B. J. Daniels, “Gun-shy Bride”, in Cold Justice, 2nd Australian paperback edition, Sydney, N.S.W.: Harlequin Mills & Boon, →ISBN, chapter 1:
      "I best get busy and box up these bones," she said, suddenly anxious to get moving. [] As she started to step around the grave washed out by last night's rainstorm, the sun caught on something caught in the mud.
  2. (transitive) Usually followed by in: to surround and enclose in a way that restricts movement; to corner, to hem in.
    • 1996, Bill Borcherdt, “The Door Swings Both Ways: When Children Double Bind Their Parents”, in Making Families Work and What to Do when They Don’t: Thirty Guides for Imperfect Parents of Imperfect Children (Haworth Marriage and the Family), New York, N.Y.: The Haworth Press, →ISBN; republished Binghamton, N.Y.: The Haworth Press, 2007, →ISBN, page 65:
      A large majority of children seem to delight in emotionally boxing in their parents—setting the double-bind trap by giving the parent two choices but determining ahead of time that neither choice will be sufficient for their satisfaction.
  3. (transitive) To mix two containers of paint of similar colour to ensure that the color is identical.
    • 2004, Brian Santos, “Painting Like a Pro”, in Painting Secrets from Brian Santos, the Wall Wizard, Des Moines, Iowa: Meredith Books, →ISBN, page 95:
      Straining eliminates lumps in the paint. If the paint has separated, stir the thick paint up from the bottom of each can to free as many lumps as possible. Then box the paint, pouring it all together through a nylon paint strainer and into the bucket. Paint less than one year old usually doesn't require straining. Older paint might have a thick skin on the top; remove the skin and set it aside. Box the paint, pouring it through a nylon paint strainer into the bucket.
  4. (transitive, agriculture) To make an incision or hole in (a tree) for the purpose of procuring the sap.
    • 1918 April, F. L. B., “The Maple Sugar Industry”, in Forest Leaves, volume XVI, number 8 (number 184 overall), Philadelphia, Pa.: Pennsylvania Forestry Association, OCLC 38266006, page 115, column 2:
      The early settlers either boxed the tree or cut large slanting gashes, from the lower end of which a rudely fashioned spout conducted the sap to a bucket. This method was very destructive to the tree, and boring was substituted for it.
  5. (transitive, architecture) To enclose with boarding, lathing, etc., so as to conceal (for example, pipes) or to bring to a required form.
    • 2013, Ronald V[ictor] Clarke; David Lester, “Introduction to the Transaction Edition”, in Suicide: Closing the Exits, New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, →ISBN, page ix:
      As early as the 1850s, prisons were being made "safer" by boxing in water pipes and enclosing galleries with netting to prevent jumping.
  6. (transitive, engineering) To furnish (for example, the axle of a wheel) with a box.
    • 1862 February 25, Archibald Alison, judge, “Sarah Hamil, or Docherty, relict of the deceased Daniel Docherty, Agnes Docherty, and Sarah Docherty, residing with her, his daughters and only children, v. James Alexander, Glasgow, Calenderer, defender”, in The Scottish Law Magazine and Sheriff Court Reporter, volume I (New Series), Glasgow: Thomas Murray & Son, []; Edinburgh: Maclachlan and Stewart, published December 1862, OCLC 841742918, page 41, column 1:
      [T]he death of the said deceased Daniel Docherty, while in the defender's employment as an engineman, [] is alleged to have been owing to the engine house, which contained the engine of which the deceased had charge, being of a dangerous and improper construction, and the fly-wheel not having been boxed in or covered: []
  7. (transitive, graphic design, printing) To enclose (images, text, etc.) in a box.
  8. (transitive, object-oriented programming) To place a value of a primitive type into a corresponding object.
Synonyms
  • (to place inside a box): box up, case, embox, encase, pack, pack up, package
Antonyms
  • (place inside a box): unbox, uncase, unpack
Derived terms
Terms derived from box (verb, etymology 1)
  • abox
  • autoboxing
  • beat-boxing
  • beat boxing
  • boxed
  • boxer
  • box-haul
  • boxhaul
  • box-hauling
  • box in
  • boxing
  • boxing day
  • boxing week
  • box up
  • rebox
  • unbox
Terms related to box (verb, etymology 1)
  • box about
  • box in
  • Boxing Day
  • box off
  • box out
  • box the compass
  • box up
Translations
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

Etymology 2

The common box, European box, or boxwood (Buxus sempervirens; sense 1)
A box scrub or Brisbane box tree (Lophostemon confertus; sense 4) in Pretoria, South Africa

From Middle English box (box tree; boxwood), from Old English box (box tree),[3] from Proto-West Germanic *buhs (box tree; thing made from boxwood), from Latin buxus (box tree; thing made from boxwood), buxum (box tree; boxwood), possibly from πύξος (púxos, box tree; boxwood).[4] Identical to etymology 1; the wood and container senses have existed in parallel since the word's origin in Latin and Ancient Greek.

Noun

box (plural boxes)

  1. Any of various evergreen shrubs or trees of genus Buxus, especiallycommon box, European box, or boxwood (Buxus sempervirens) which is often used for making hedges and topiary.
    • 1587, Leuinus Lemnius, Thomas Newton, transl., An Herball to the Bible [] , London: Edmund Bollifant, page 207:
      And no maruell. For, the leaues of Boxe be deletorious, poiſonous, deadlie, and to the bodie of man very noiſome, dangerous and peſtilent []
    • 1847 October 16, Currer Bell [pseudonym; Charlotte Brontë], chapter V, in Jane Eyre. An Autobiography. [], volume II, London: Smith, Elder, and Co., [], OCLC 3163777, pages 130–131:
      He strayed down a walk edged with box; with apple trees, pear trees, and cherry trees on one side, and a border on the other, full of all sorts of old-fashioned flowers, stocks, sweet-williams, primroses, pansies, mingled with southernwood, sweet-briar, and various fragrant herbs.
    • 2014 November 19, Ambra Edwards, “Topiary: We're all going bonkers about box [print version: Bonkers about box, 22 November 2014, page G3]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Gardening):
      "Box makes a statement without having to do much: just trim twice a year and keep it weeded. It's a bit of a lazy gardener's plant." This, no doubt, is what makes box so popular with show home developers and city dwellers – there is scarce a balcony or front door anywhere that cannot be improved by a box ball in a pot.
  2. The wood from a box tree: boxwood.
    • 1885 April 10, John R. Jackson, “Boxwood and Its Substitutes”, in Journal of the Society of Arts, volume XXXIII, number 1,690, London: Published for the Society by George Bell and Sons, [], page 567, column 1:
      Nevertheless, the application of woods other than box for purposes for which that wood is now used would tend to lessen the demand for box, and thus might have an effect in lowering its price.
  3. (music, slang) A musical instrument, especially one made from boxwood.
    • 1937, Zora Neale Hurston, chapter 11, in Their Eyes were Watching God: A Novel, Harper Perennial Modern Classics edition, Philadelphia, Pa.; London: J.B. Lippincott Company, OCLC 144692287; Illini Books edition, Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1978, →ISBN, page 153:
      Evenin’, folks. Thought y’all might lak uh lil music this evenin’ so Ah brought long mah box.
  4. (Australia) An evergreen tree of the genus Lophostemon (for example, box scrub, Brisbane box, brush box, pink box, or Queensland box, Lophostemon confertus).
  5. (Australia) Various species of Eucalyptus trees are popularly called various kinds of boxes, on the basis of the nature of their wood, bark, or appearance for example, the drooping (Eucalyptus bicolor), shiny-leaved (Eucalyptus tereticornis), black, or ironbark box trees.
    • 1909, J. H. Maiden, A Critical Revision of the Genus Eucalyptus, Government of the State of New South Wales:
      The name "Black Box" seems to be most generally in use for this species, Eucalyptus boormani; the even better name of "Ironbark Box" (which certainly indicates its affinities) is nearly as frequently in use.
Derived terms
Terms derived from box (noun, etymology 2)
  • bastard box
  • bonnet-box
  • box alder, box elder
  • boxberry
  • box-edged
  • boxen
  • boxer
  • box-gum
  • Box Hill
  • box holly, box-holly
  • box-room
  • box scrub
  • box-slip
  • box thorn, box-thorn, boxthorn
  • box-tree
  • boxwood
  • Brisbane box
  • brush box
  • common box
  • dwarf box
  • European box
  • flowering box
  • grey box
  • ground box
  • pink box
  • prickly box
  • Queensland box
  • red box
  • Tasmanian box
Translations

Etymology 3

A woman practising boxing in Brazil

From Middle English box (a blow; a stroke with a weapon);[5] further origin uncertain. The following etymologies have been suggested:[6]

  • Possibly related to Proto-Germanic *boki-, whence Danish bask (a blow; a stripe), Danish baske (to flap, move around, beat violently), Middle Dutch boke (a blow, a hit), bōken (to slap, strike) (modern Dutch beuken (to slap)), West Frisian bûtse, bûtsje (to slap), Saterland Frisian batsje (to slap), Low German betschen (to slap, beat with a flat hand), Middle High German buc (a blow, a stroke), bochen (to slap, strike).
  • Possibly onomatopoeic.
  • Possibly from box (“cuboid space; container”), perhaps referring to the shape of the fist.
  • Possibly from Ancient Greek πύξ (púx, with clenched fist), πυγμή (pugmḗ, fist; boxing).

The verb is from Middle English boxen (to beat or whip (an animal)), which is derived from the noun.[7]

Noun

box (plural boxes)

  1. A blow with the fist.
    • c. 1596–1598 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Merchant of Venice”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies [] (First Folio), London: [] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, [Act I, scene ii], page 166:
      That he hath a neighbourly charitie in him, for he borrowed a boxe of the eare of the Engliſhman, and ſwore he would pay him againe when hee was able : I thinke the Frenchman became his ſuretie, and ſeald vnder for another.
    • 1824, Geoffrey Crayon [pseudonym; Washington Irving], “The Bold Dragoon, or The Adventure of My Grandfather”, in Tales of a Traveller, part 1 (Strange Stories. []), Philadelphia, Pa.: H[enry] C[harles] Carey & I[saac] Lea, [], OCLC 864083, page 62:
      And then he whispered something to the girl which made her laugh, and give him a good-humoured box on the ear.
    • 1837 May, Boz [pseudonym; Charles Dickens], “Oliver Continues Refractory”, in Oliver Twist; or, The Parish Boy’s Progress. [], volume I, London: Richard Bentley, [], published 1838, OCLC 558204586, page 110:
      "Now, you are a nice young fellow, ain't you?" said Sowerberry, giving Oliver a shake and a box on the ear.
Synonyms
  • blow
  • cuff
  • punch
Translations

Verb

box (third-person singular simple present boxes, present participle boxing, simple past and past participle boxed)

  1. (transitive) To strike with the fists; to punch.
    box someone’s ears
    Leave this place before I box you!
    • 1847 October 16, Currer Bell [pseudonym; Charlotte Brontë], chapter IV, in Jane Eyre. An Autobiography. [], volume I, London: Smith, Elder, and Co., [], OCLC 3163777, pages 42–43:
      Mrs. Reed soon rallied her spirits: she shook me most soundly, she boxed both my ears, and then left me without a word.
  2. (transitive, boxing) To fight against (a person) in a boxing match.
  3. (intransitive, stative, boxing) To participate in boxing; to be a boxer.
Derived terms
Terms derived from box (verb, etymology 3)
  • BoxAerobics, boxaerobics
  • box clever
  • boxer
  • Boxer
  • boxercise
  • boxiana
  • boxing
  • box it out
  • box oneself into a corner
  • box-on (noun)
  • box on (verb)
  • box someone's ears
  • out-box
  • shadow-box, shadowbox
Descendants
  • French: boxer
    • Catalan: boxar
  • Galician: boxear
  • German: boxen
  • Portuguese: boxear, boxar
  • Spanish: boxear
Translations

Etymology 4

The box or bogue (Boops boops), a variety of sea bream

From Latin bōx, from Ancient Greek βῶξ (bôx, box (marine fish)), from βοῦς (boûs, ox) + ὤψ (ṓps, eye, view), a reference to the large size of the fish's eyes relative to its body.[8]

Noun

box (plural boxes)

  1. (dated) A Mediterranean food fish of the genus Boops, which is a variety of sea bream; a bogue or oxeye.
    • 1859, Albert Günther, “Fam. 7. SPARIDÆ”, in Catalogue of Acanthopterygian Fishes in the Collection of the British Museum, volume I (Gasterosteidæ, Berycidæ, Percidæ, Aphredoderidæ, Pristipomatidæ, Mullidæ, Sparidæ), London: Printed [by Taylor and Francis by order of the trustees [of the British Museum], OCLC 853056837, page 418:
      BOX. Box (Boops), [] In both jaws a single anterior series of broad incisors, notched at the cutting margin; no molars.
    • 1860, William Yarrell, “The Bogue”, in John Richardson, editor, Second Supplement to the First Edition of the History of British Fishes, [], London: John Van Voorst, [], OCLC 7391853981, page 6:
      The Bogue. [] Box or Boops. Generic Character.—Body elongated, rounded, the dorsal and ventral profiles alike, and the general aspect peculiarly trim.
    • 1862, Jonathan Couch, A History of the Fishes of the British Islands, volume I, London: Groombridge and Sons, [], OCLC 1046521752, page 225:
      BOGUE. BOX. OXEYE. [] In some parts of the European side of the Mediterranean the Bogue is a common fish, and where it frequents it is in great abundance.
Translations

References

  1. box, n.(2)”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 23 August 2018.
  2. Compare box, n.2”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1887.
  3. box, n.(1)”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 23 August 2018.
  4. box, n.1”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1887.
  5. box, n.(3)”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 23 August 2018.
  6. box, n.3”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1887.
  7. boxen, v.(2)”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 23 August 2018; box, v.2”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1887.
  8. “Class IV.—PISCES.”, in Illustrations of Zoology. [], London: Published by John Joseph Griffin and Co., []; Glasgow: Richard Griffin and Co., 1851, OCLC 156769589, page 112:Boops. The eyes of the fish belonging to the genus are very large, whence the generic name from the Greek βοῦς, an Ox, and ὤψ, an eye.”

Further reading

  • box on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • box (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • box at OneLook Dictionary Search

Anagrams

  • BXO, OBX

Czech

box

Noun

box m

  1. boxing (the sport of boxing)

Declension

  • boxér
  • boxérky
  • boxovat

Further reading

  • box in Příruční slovník jazyka českého, 1935–1957
  • box in Slovník spisovného jazyka českého, 1960–1971, 1989

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English box.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bɔks/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: box
  • Rhymes: -ɔks
  • Homophone: boks

Noun

box m (plural boxen, diminutive boxje n)

  1. speaker, loudspeaker
    Synonyms: luidspreker, speaker
  2. playpen
  3. compartment for livestock

Descendants

  • ? Saramaccan: bokúsu
  • Sranan Tongo: boks

French

Etymology

From English box. Doublet of boîte.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bɔks/
  • (file)

Noun

box m (plural box or boxes)

  1. stall (for a horse), loose box
  2. compartment, cubicle
  3. garage, lock-up (for a car)

Derived terms

  • box des accusés

Further reading

  • box”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.

Noun

box f (plural box)

  1. Electronic equipment used for internet access (component of the digital subscriber line technology)

Hungarian

Noun

box

  1. Misspelling of boksz.

Icelandic

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpɔxs/

Noun

box n (genitive singular box, nominative plural box)

  1. box (container)
    Synonym: kassi
  2. (sports) boxing
    Synonym: hnefaleikar

Declension

Derived terms

  • boxa
  • boxhanski
  • nestisbox

Italian

Etymology

Pseudo-anglicism, from English box, variously clipped (in the meaning "horsebox") or with transferred senses.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbɔks/
  • Rhymes: -ɔks
  • Hyphenation: bòx

Noun

box m (invariable)

  1. horsebox
  2. (automotive) garage, lock-up
  3. (motor racing) pit
  4. playpen

Latin

Etymology

From Ancient Greek βώξ (bṓx).

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /boːks/, [boːks̠]
  • (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /boks/, [bɔks]

Noun

bōx m (genitive bōcis); third declension

  1. A kind of marine fish

Declension

Third-declension noun.

CaseSingularPlural
Nominativebōxbōcēs
Genitivebōcisbōcum
Dativebōcībōcibus
Accusativebōcembōcēs
Ablativebōcebōcibus
Vocativebōxbōcēs

References

  • box”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • box in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
  • box in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette

Middle English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbɔks/
  • Rhymes: -ɔks

Etymology 1

Inherited from Old English box, from Proto-West Germanic *buhs, from Latin buxus, possibly from Ancient Greek πύξος (púxos).

Alternative forms

  • boxe

Noun

box

  1. A box tree (the tree Buxus sempervirens)
  2. The wood of this tree; boxwood.
Descendants
  • English: box
References
  • box, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

Etymology 2

From Old English box, from Proto-West Germanic *buhs, from Latin buxus in extended use.

Alternative forms

  • boxe

Noun

box (plural boxes)

  1. A cylindrical jar.
  2. A case, container or strongbox.
  3. A bloodletting cup.
  4. (anatomy) The socket of a joint.
Descendants
  • English: box (see there for further descendants)
  • Scots: box
References
  • box, n.(2).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

Etymology 3

Unknown; see English box (blow with the fist) for more.

Alternative forms

  • boxe

Noun

box

  1. A blow with the fist.
Descendants
  • English: box
  • Scots: box
References
  • box, n.(3).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

Old English

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *buhs.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /boks/

Noun

box m

  1. box
  2. box tree

Declension

Derived terms

  • boxtrēow
  • byxen
  • ġewyrtbox
  • sāpbox
  • sealfbox

Descendants

  • Middle English: box, boxe
    • English: box (see there for further descendants)
    • Scots: box

Portuguese

FWOTD – 9 May 2013

Alternative forms

  • boxe (prescriptive)

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from English box.

Pronunciation

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈbɔks/, /ˈbɔk.si/
    • (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈbɔks/, /ˈbɔk.se/
  • (Portugal) IPA(key): /ˈbɔks/, /ˈbɔ.ks(ɨ)/

Noun

box (Brazil) m or (Portugal) f (plural boxes) (proscribed)

  1. stall (for a horse)
  2. electronic equipment used for internet access (component of the digital subscriber line technology)
  3. (Brazil) the curtain or glass panes which separate the shower from the rest of the bathroom; shower stall
    • 2003, Eileen G. de Paiva e Mello, Questão de Tempo, Thesaurus Editora, page 150:
      A mais velha procurava arrancar a cortina do box, pendurando-se nela!
      The oldest one wanted to pull off the stall curtain by hanging to it!

Derived terms

  • encostar às boxes

Romanian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈboks/
  • Rhymes: -oks

Etymology 1

Borrowed from French boxe.

Noun

box n (plural boxuri)

  1. (sports) boxing (the sport of)
  2. A kind of sword.
Synonyms
  • (the sport): pugilat, pugilism, pugilistică

Etymology 2

From French box.

Noun

box

  1. bovine leather

Noun

box

  1. A breed of bulldog.

Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from English box. Doublet of buje.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈboɡs/ [ˈboɣ̞s]
  • Rhymes: -oɡs
  • Syllabification: box

Noun

box m (plural boxes)

  1. boxing (sport)
  2. (motor racing) pit
  3. (sports) box

Derived terms

  • calle de boxes
  • parada en boxes
  • parar en boxes

Further reading

  • box”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • Homophone: bocks

Noun

box c

  1. box, crate; a cuboid container

Declension

Declension of box 
SingularPlural
IndefiniteDefiniteIndefiniteDefinite
Nominativeboxboxenboxarboxarna
Genitiveboxboxensboxarsboxarnas

Derived terms

  • frysbox
  • kylbox
  • postbox
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