释义 |
noun | verb boxbox1 /bɑks/ ●●● S1 W1 noun ETYMOLOGYbox1Origin: 900-1000 Latin buxus, from Greek pyxis, from pyxos type of tree, whose wood was used for making boxes ► toolbox/shoebox/lunchbox etc. (=a box used for keeping tools, shoes, etc. in) ► Check ... box Check this box (=put a check mark in the box) if you would like more information. 1 CONTAINER [countable] a container for putting things in, especially one with four stiff straight sides: a cardboard box a cereal box five wooden boxestoolbox/shoebox/lunchbox etc. (=a box used for keeping tools, shoes, etc. in)2AMOUNT (also boxful) [countable] the amount that a box can hold: box of a box of chocolates3SHAPE [countable] a)a square on a page or website that people can write information in: Write the total in the box below. Check this box (=put a check mark in the box) if you would like more information. b)a square or rectangle on a page where information is given: The box on the left gives a short history of the Alamo.4IN A THEATER ETC. [countable] a small area of seats in a theater, sports stadium, etc. that is separate from where other people are sitting → see also sentry box5AT A POST OFFICE [countable usually singular] a box with a number in a post office, where you can have mail sent to instead of your own address: P.O. Box6SMALL BUILDING [countable] a small building or structure used for a particular purpose SYN booth: a sentry box (=a small structure where a guard stands)7AREA OF A SPORTS FIELD [countable] a special area of a sports field that is marked by lines and used for a particular purpose: the penalty box the batter’s box8the (idiot) box informal the television: What’s on the box tonight?9in a box informal dead and in a coffin: Too many soldiers were coming home in boxes.[Origin: 900–1000 Latin buxus, from Greek pyxis, from pyxos type of tree, whose wood was used for making boxes] → see also black box, think outside the box at think (21) noun | verb boxbox2 ●●○ verb ETYMOLOGYbox2Origin: (1,4) 1300-1400 Origin unknown. (2-3) 1400-1500 ➔ BOX1 VERB TABLEbox |
Present | I, you, we, they | box | | he, she, it | boxes | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | boxed | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have boxed | | he, she, it | has boxed | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had boxed | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will box | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have boxed |
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Present | I | am boxing | | he, she, it | is boxing | | you, we, they | are boxing | Past | I, he, she, it | was boxing | | you, we, they | were boxing | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been boxing | | he, she, it | has been boxing | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been boxing | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be boxing | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been boxing |
THESAURUShit people► fight to use physical force, for example hitting or kicking, or weapons to try to hurt someone: The children fought and pushed in line. She and her brother used to fight like cats and dogs (=fight violently). ► struggle to fight someone who is holding you, in order to get away: “Let me go!” I shouted and began to struggle. ► battle to keep fighting hard until one person or group wins. Used especially in writing: Protesters battled police through the night. ► clash if groups of people clash, they have a short fight. Used especially in news reports: Demonstrators in the financial district have clashed with police. ► scuffle to fight with another person for a short time: The two men scuffled outside the bar. ► brawl if a group of people brawl, they fight noisily and violently: The two teams brawled on the field after the game. ► tussle to fight in a way that is not very violent, especially as a way of playing with someone: The boy tussled with his uncle on the living room floor. ► wrestle to fight by holding someone and trying to push him or her to the ground: A security guard managed to wrestle the thief to the ground. ► box to fight someone while wearing big leather gloves, as a sport: He began to box as a boy and later competed in the Olympics. 1[intransitive, transitive] to fight someone as a sport by hitting him or her with your closed hands inside big leather gloves ► see thesaurus at fight12 (also box up) [transitive] to put things in boxes → see also boxed3[transitive] to draw a box around something on a page4box somebody’s ears old-fashioned to hit someone on the side of his or her headbox somebody/something in phrasal verb1to surround someone or something so that he or she is unable to move freely: My car was completely boxed in by two big trucks.2box yourself in to say or do something now that limits the way you can behave later: He’s boxing himself in by refusing to consult with his colleagues.3feel boxed in a)to feel that you are limited in what you can do because of a particular situation or what someone else wants: Married for only six months, Dawn already felt boxed in. b)to feel that you cannot move freely, because you are in a small spacebox something off phrasal verb to separate a particular area from a larger one by putting walls around it: We’re going to box off that corner and make it a separate office. |