box
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Remove ads
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Audio (Southern England): | (file) |
Audio (US): | (file) |
Audio (General Australian): | (file) |
From Middle English box (“container, box, cup”), from Old English box (“box, case”),[1] from Proto-West Germanic *buhsā (“box”) from Late Latin buxis (“box”), Latin pyxis (“small box for medicines or toiletries”), of uncertain origin; compare Ancient Greek πύξος (púxos, “box or tablet made of boxwood; box; cylinder”) and Ancient Greek πυξίς (puxís, “box or tablet made of boxwood; box; cylinder”).[2][3] Doublet of piseog, pyx, and pyxis.
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.
box (plural boxes or (nonstandard, computing, humorous) boxen)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
box (third-person singular simple present boxes, present participle boxing, simple past and past participle boxed)
|
From Middle English box (“box tree; boxwood”), from Old English box (“box tree”),[4] 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”).[5]
box (plural boxes)
|
From Middle English box (“a blow; a stroke with a weapon”);[6] further origin uncertain, with relation[7] 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 bûkje, bûtse, bûtsje (“to slap”), West Frisian and 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”), and further onomatopoeic shaping.
The verb is from Middle English boxen (“to beat or whip (an animal)”), which is derived from the noun.[8]
box (plural boxes)
|
box (third-person singular simple present boxes, present participle boxing, simple past and past participle boxed)
|
|
|
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.[9]
box (plural boxes)
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.