treasure chest
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
Noun
treasure chest (plural treasure chests)
- A chest filled with treasure, especially one used by pirates, etc.
- (metonymically) A treasury, especially a state or royal treasury.
- 1892, Joseph Jacobs, “Notes on the Jews of England under the Angevin Kings”, in The Jewish Quarterly Review, volume 4, page 634:
- They acted the part of a sponge for the Royal Treasury, they gathered up all the floating money of the country, to be squeezed from time to time into the king’s treasure-chest […]
- 1977, Richard Hyatt, The Carters of Plains, page 103:
- The visitors pour upward of $60,000 into the state’s treasure chest.
- 2006, D. M. Metcalf, “Inflows of Anglo-Saxon and German coins into the Northern lands c. 997–1024: discerning the patterns”, in Barrie Cook, Gareth Williams, editors, Coinage and History in the North Sea World, c. AD 500–1250, →ISBN, page 364:
- When Anglo-Saxon coins left England for Scandinavia they could, hypothetically, have been withdrawn from a royal treasure-chest replenished from tolls and taxes collected nationwide.
- (figurative) Any source of something valuable or beautiful.
- Synonym: gold mine
- a treasure chest of poems
Translations
chest filled with treasure
|
royal treasury
|
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.