deathbox

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From death +‎ box. Compare Dutch doodskist (literally death-chest).

Noun[edit]

deathbox (plural deathboxes)

  1. (nonstandard, kenning) coffin
    • 2002, William T. Vollmann, Argall: The True Story of Pocahontas and Captain John Smith:
      Once he was asleep again, they brought him back again, bound him, sealed him in his deathbox, muffled the World from him with a black, black pall.
    • 2003, Philip Kaplan, Chariots of Fire:
      I always remember hearing infantry men say to us again and again: 'I wouldn't like to go in your deathboxes,' and we always answered: 'And we don't like to walk.'”
    • 2011, Amaleka McCall, Hard Candy:
      Razor's mother hollered and spread her body atop her son's shiny death box. “Why, Lord? Why my chile?!” the woman screamed.
    • 2011, Ian Watson, The Book of the Stars: Black Current, book 2:
      The local militia, led by their 'jack captain, paid their respects by carrying the death-box and by escorting it.