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From Old Japanese. Compound of 重ね(kasane, “a pile, a tier, a ply”) + 箱(hako, “a box”), the first element being the 連用形(ren'yōkei, “continuative or stem form”) of classical verb 重ぬkasanu, modern 重ねるkasaneru, “to make a pile of something, to stack something up”. The hako changes to bako as an instance of rendaku (連濁).
(rare)tiered boxes for holding and presenting food, such as 弁当(bentō, “bento”) or New Year'sお節(osechi, special dishes usually only served at the new year)
tiered boxes for holding and presenting food, such as 弁当(bentō, “bento”) or New Year'sお節(osechi, special dishes usually only served at the new year)
These are traditionally made of wood and often lacquered, coming in sets designed to stack two, three, or even more layers high. Often square, jūbako may also come in different shapes. A set usually comes with a lid for the top layer.
Idioms
Idioms
重箱で味噌を擂る(jūbako de miso o suru): “grind miso in a jūbako” → don't sweat the small stuff; excellent appearance, but inappropriate to the task at hand