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  2. box (n.1) "rectangular wooden container," usually with a lid, Old English box, also the name of a type of shrub, from Late Latin buxis, from Greek pyxis "boxwood," pyxion "writing table, box," made of boxwood, from pyxos "box tree," which is of uncertain origin.
    www.etymonline.com/word/box
    From Middle English box (“container, box, cup”), from Old English box (“box, case”), from Proto-West Germanic *buhsā (“box”) 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”)).
    en.wiktionary.org/wiki/box
     
  3. People also ask
    Where did the word box come from?"rectangular wooden container," usually with a lid, Old English box, also the name of a type of shrub, from Late Latin buxis, from Greek pyxis "boxwood," pyxion "writing table, box," made of boxwood, from pyxos "box tree," which is of uncertain origin. Beekes suggests a loan-word from Italy, as that is where the tree is native.
    What is box noun?Definition of box noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary [countable] (especially in compounds) a container made of wood, thick card, metal, etc. with a flat stiff base and sides and often a lid (= cover), used especially for holding solid things in a box Everything we owned was neatly packed in cardboard boxes.
    What does box mean in a sentence?Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Box definition: a container, case, or receptacle, usually rectangular, of wood, metal, cardboard, etc., and often with a lid or removable cover. See examples of BOX used in a sentence.
    When was box slang invented?The slang meaning "vulva" is attested 17c., according to "Dictionary of American Slang;" modern use seems to date from c. World War II, perhaps originally Australian, on the notion of box of tricks. Box lunch (n.) is attested from 1899. The box set "multiple-album, CD or cassette issue of the work of an artist" is attested by 1955.
     
  4. Dictionary

    box
    [bäks]
    noun
    box (noun) · boxes (plural noun) · the box (noun)
    1. a container with a flat base and sides, typically square or rectangular and having a lid:
      "a cereal box" · "a hat box"
      • the contents of a box:
        "she ate a whole box of chocolates that night"
      • informal
        (the box)
        television or a television set:
        "light entertainment shows on the box"
      • informal
        a casing containing a computer:
        "the new model is half the cost of an equivalent IBM box"
      • informal
        a coffin:
        "I always thought I'd be in a box when I finally left here"
      • historical
        a coachman's seat.
    2. an area on a page that is to be filled in or that is set off by a border:
      "a picture of Sandy was in the upper right-hand box"
      • an area on a computer screen for user input or displaying information:
        "a new box appears containing the names of all the programs which are opened"
      • soccer
        (the box)
        the penalty area:
        "he curled in a shot from the edge of the box"
      • baseball
        (the boxthe batter's box)
        the rectangular area occupied by the batter:
        "ten thousand people booed him when he stepped into the box"
      • baseball
        the rectangular area behind home plate for the catcher (catcher's box), or those near first and third bases, in foul territory, for each base coach (coach's box).
    3. a separate section or enclosed area within a larger building, especially one reserved for a group of people in a theater or sports ground or for witnesses or the jury in a law court:
      "a box at the opera" · "the jury was now in the box"
      • BRITISH ENGLISH
        a small country house for use when hunting or fishing.
    4. a protective casing for a piece of a mechanism:
      "in the second variation, a switch loop, only one cable enters the box"
    5. a mailbox at a post office, newspaper office, or other facility where a person may arrange to receive correspondence:
      "write to me care of PO Box 112"
    6. vulgar slang
      a woman's vagina.
    verb
    box (verb) · boxes (third person present) · boxed (past tense) · boxed (past participle) · boxing (present participle)
    1. put in or provide with a box:
      "each piece is boxed with a certificate of authenticity" · "Muriel boxed up all Christopher's clothes"
      • enclose (a piece of text) within printed lines:
        "procedures relating to topics within the chapter are boxed in and numbered so that the reader can quickly recognize them"
    Origin
    late Old English, probably from late Latin buxis, from Latin pyxis ‘boxwood box’, from Greek puxos (see box).
    box
    [bäks]
    verb
    box (verb) · boxes (third person present) · boxed (past tense) · boxed (past participle) · boxing (present participle)
    1. fight an opponent using one's fists; compete in the sport of boxing:
      "he boxed for England" · "he had to box Bennett for the title"
      Similar:
      exchange blows
      engage in fisticuffs
    noun
    box (noun)
    1. a slap with the hand on the side of a person's head given as a punishment or in anger:
      "she gave him a box on the ear"
    Origin
    late Middle English (in the general sense ‘a blow’): of unknown origin.
    box
    [bäks]
    noun
    box (noun) · boxes (plural noun) · box tree (noun) · box trees (plural noun) · boxwood (noun) · Venezuelan box (noun) · Venezuelan boxes (plural noun) · West Indian box (noun) · West Indian boxes (plural noun)
    1. a slow-growing European evergreen shrub or small tree with glossy dark green leaves. It is often grown as a hedge and for topiary.
      • the hard, heavy wood of the box tree, formerly widely used for engraving and for musical instruments.
    2. any of a number of trees that have wood or foliage similar to the box tree.
      • several Australian eucalyptus trees (genus Eucalyptus, family Myrtaceae).
      • the tropical American Venezuelan box, or West Indian box (Casearia praecox, family Flacourtiaceae), the wood of which has now largely replaced that of the European box.
    Origin
    Old English, via Latin from Greek puxos.
    Translate box to
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