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glory box. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
Probably related to UK dialect glory hole (“place for storing odds and ends”).[1]
Pronunciation
Noun
glory box (plural glory boxes)
- (Australia, New Zealand) A lady’s storage box containing items saved for her wedding or married life.
- 1985, Janet McCalman, Struggletown: Public and Private Life in Richmond, 1900-1965, Melbourne University Press, page 148,
- Every girl who hoped to marry had started early on her glory box, sewing and embroidering household linen, buying sheets and towels on cash order.
2003, Jane Malthus, Chris Brickell, “Producing and Consuming Gender: The Case of Clothing”, in Barbara Lesley Brookes, Annabel Cooper, Robin Law, editors, Sites of Gender: Women, Men and Modernity in Southern Dunedin, 1890-1939, page 124:Trousseaux and glory boxes could be slowly built up while women were engaged in the paid workforce, before marriage heralded the loss of an independent income.
2004, Kerry Greenwood, The Long Walk, unnumbered page:‘ […] You can work on my daughter′s glory box. She′s had to get a job in the pub and she hasn′t had time to finish it and she′s getting married in December.’
2011, Zoe Boccabella, Mezza Italiana, unnumbered page:She said that her mother brought them out to Australia in a baule — a huge glory box — along with blankets, kitchen utensils, crockery, and 32 litres of olive oil in tins. Tucked in this glory box, the linens travelled in the hull of a ship from Naples across oceans and seas, on a train from Sydney to Stanthorpe, by horse and cart to Applethorpe and later by ute to Brisbane.
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