Hypertext Webster Gateway: "Coffer"

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary (easton)

Coffer
the receptacle or small box placed beside the ark by the
Philistines, in which they deposited the golden mice and the
emerods as their trespass-offering (1 Sam. 6:8, 11, 15).

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Coffer \Cof"fer\, v. t.
1. To put into a coffer. --Bacon.

2. (Mining.) To secure from leaking, as a shaft, by ramming
clay behind the masonry or timbering. --Raymond.

3. To form with or in a coffer or coffers; to furnish with a
coffer or coffers.

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) (web1913)

Coffer \Cof"fer\ (?; 115), n. [OF. cofre, F. coffre, L. cophinus
basket, fr. Gr. ?. Cf. {Coffin}, n.]
1. A casket, chest, or trunk; especially, one used for
keeping money or other valuables. --Chaucer.

In ivory coffers I have stuffed my crowns. --Shak.

2. Fig.: Treasure or funds; -- usually in the plural.

He would discharge it without any burden to the
queen's coffers, for honor sake. --Bacon.

Hold, here is half my coffer. --Shak.

3. (Arch.) A panel deeply recessed in the ceiling of a vault,
dome, or portico; a caisson.

4. (Fort.) A trench dug in the bottom of a dry moat, and
extending across it, to enable the besieged to defend it
by a raking fire.

5. The chamber of a canal lock; also, a caisson or a
cofferdam.

{Coffer dam}. (Engin.) See {Cofferdam}, in the Vocabulary.

{Coffer fish}. (Zo["o]l.) See {Cowfish}.

From WordNet (r) 1.7 (wn)

coffer
n 1: an ornamental sunken panel in a ceiling or dome [syn: {caisson},
{lacuna}]
2: a chest especially for storing valuables


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