1A lockable container, typically for storing money or valuables.
Example sentencesExamples
Once they are given the right to protect plane and passengers, pilots must still carry their firearm in a lockbox.
They were selling - alongside actual useful items such as safes, lockboxes, and hardened steel chain - dummy security cameras. £17.50 gets you pure deterrent factor - a mock camera with a blinking red LED.
She suddenly wished she had a bigger gun before realising the irony of her chain of thought; her bigger gun was in the lockbox.
In a letter to two senators, the White House recommended giving pilots lockboxes for the weapons so they won't be left in the cockpit.
The activists inserted an arm into each lockbox and locked themselves to each other.
1.1mass nounA service provided by a bank, whereby the bank receives, processes, and deposits all of a company's mail receipts.
锁箱服务(由银行提供的一种服务,用以接收、处理并存储公司的邮件)
Definition of lockbox in US English:
lockbox
nounˈläkbäks
North American
1A lockable container, typically for storing money or valuables.
Example sentencesExamples
Once they are given the right to protect plane and passengers, pilots must still carry their firearm in a lockbox.
The activists inserted an arm into each lockbox and locked themselves to each other.
She suddenly wished she had a bigger gun before realising the irony of her chain of thought; her bigger gun was in the lockbox.
They were selling - alongside actual useful items such as safes, lockboxes, and hardened steel chain - dummy security cameras. £17.50 gets you pure deterrent factor - a mock camera with a blinking red LED.
In a letter to two senators, the White House recommended giving pilots lockboxes for the weapons so they won't be left in the cockpit.
1.1A service provided by a bank, whereby the bank receives, processes, and deposits all of a company's receivables.