- [countable] (especially in compounds) a container made of wood, thick card, metal, etc. with a flat 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.
- She kept all the letters in a box.
- inside a box Do you know what is inside the box?
- She opened her money box to see if she had saved enough for a tennis racket.
- a toolbox
- a matchbox
Extra Examples- She filled the box with old clothes.
- The dog sleeps in a box lined with an old blanket.
- The exhibition is free, but there is a collection box for donations.
- They were sitting around the fire on upturned boxes.
- This box holds ten candles and costs $21.40.
- We packed all the books into boxes.
- a box marked ‘fragile’
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- rectangular
- square
- upturned
- …
- pile
- stack
- fill
- pack
- pack something in
- …
- be filled with something
- be full of something
- contain something
- …
- in a/the box
- inside a/the box
- into a/the box
- …
- the lid of a box
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- [countable] box (of something) a box and its contents; the things a box contains
- a box of chocolates/cereal/tissues
- He produced a box of matches from his pocket.
- The cookies were so good that I ate the whole box.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- rectangular
- square
- upturned
- …
- pile
- stack
- fill
- pack
- pack something in
- …
- be filled with something
- be full of something
- contain something
- …
- in a/the box
- inside a/the box
- into a/the box
- …
- the lid of a box
- [countable] a square or rectangle on a page or computer screen for people to put information in or containing extra or different information
- Put a cross in the appropriate box.
- (British English) to tick a box
- (North American English) to check a box
- Type your query in the search box.
- There are over 300 special note boxes in the dictionary.
Extra Examples- Put a cross in the box if you agree with the comments.
- Tick the appropriate box below.
- The basic search screen includes two text boxes for words to be searched.
- A box pops up on the monitor providing a customer profile.
- Please offer your own ideas in the comment box at the end of this blog.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- appropriate
- relevant
- dialog
- …
- check
- fill in
- mark
- …
- in a/the box
- into a/the box
- tick all the boxes
- [countable] a small area in a theatre, court or sports stadium, separated off from where other people sit
- The painting depicts two elegantly dressed women in a box at the opera.
- The judge addressed the 12 people seated in the jury box.
- They drank champagne as they watched the game from the executive box.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- soundproof
- call
- phone
- …
- in a/the box
- into a/the box
- [countable] a small shelter used for a particular purpose
- a sentry/signal box
- (British English, old-fashioned) a telephone/phone box
- There was a babble of languages in the commentary box when the race began.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- soundproof
- call
- phone
- …
- in a/the box
- into a/the box
- the box[singular] (especially British English, old-fashioned, informal) the television
- on the box What's on the box tonight?
- [countable] (British English) (also box junction)a place where two roads cross or join, marked with a pattern of yellow lines to show that vehicles must not stop in that area
- Only traffic turning right may enter the box.
- [countable] an area on a sports field that is marked by lines and used for a particular purpose
- (British English) He was fouled in the box (= the penalty box).
- [countable] (also box number)a number used as an address, especially one given in newspaper advertisements to which replies can be sent see also PO box
- [countable] (British English) a piece of plastic that a man wears over his sex organs to protect them while he is playing a sport, especially cricket compare cup (10)Topics Sports: ball and racket sportsc2
- [countable, uncountable] a small evergreen tree or bush with thick dark leaves, used especially for garden hedges
- (also boxwood)[uncountable] the hard wood of the box tree
container
shape
in theatre/court
shelter
television
on road
in sport
for mail
protection
tree/wood
Word Originnoun senses 1 to 10 late Old English, probably from late Latin buxis, from Latin pyxis ‘boxwood box’, from Greek puxos. noun senses 11 to 12 Old English, via Latin from Greek puxos.
Idioms
See box in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee box in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic Englisha bag/box of tricks
- (informal) a set of methods or equipment that somebody can use
- Hotel managers are using a whole new bag of tricks to attract their guests.
give somebody a box on the ears
- (also box somebody's ears)(old-fashioned) to hit somebody with your hand on the side of their head as a punishment
think out of the box
- to think about something, or how to do something, in a way that is new, different or shows imagination
tick all the/somebody’s boxes
- (British English, informal) to do exactly the right things to please somebody
- This is a movie that ticks all the boxes.
- The house we would like to buy ticks all our boxes.
Check pronunciation:
box