box office 的定义
- the office of a theater, stadium, or the like, at which tickets are sold.
- Theater. receipts from a play or other entertainment.entertainment popular enough to attract paying audiences and make a profit: This show will be good box office.
box office 近义词
ticket office
box office 的近义词 3 个
更多box office例句
- He arrived in the United States in 2002 at the age of 17, the same year Sam Raimi’s first “Spider-Man” movie broke records at the box office and made superheroes a mainstay in theaters.
- That should be enough for a franchise that already dominates the box office, with three of the five highest-grossing movies of 2019 to its name.
- He’s a partial-season plan holder now, but in 2016 he would often take advantage of the Nationals’ $5 same-day deal at the ballpark box office.
- A bit of a box office and critical disappointment at its release, The Muppet Christmas Carol has gone on to become a holiday classic for many.
- So far, box office revenues are down 80% from 2019 levels, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
- How do you feel about Archer and the gang abandoning the cartel and returning to the office?
- Two witnesses outside the Charlie Hebdo office building quoted the Kouachi brothers claiming they were members of al Qaeda.
- Who among Scalise's constituents could possibly care if he supported naming a post office for a black judge who died in 1988?
- Granted, James is in an office in the Pentagon, and not on the front lines.
- In contrast, Boehner's leadership team filed into his ceremonial office and greeted the teary newly-elected Speaker with hugs.
- It was with a feeling of relief on both sides that the arrival of Mr. Haggard, of the Home Office, was announced.
- Beside her was a box of bonbons, which she held out at intervals to Madame Ratignolle.
- Now and then the boy who had bought Squinty, and who was taking him home, would look around at his pet in the slatted box.
- The little pig in the box felt himself being lifted out of the wagon.
- On a small scale map, in an office, you may make mole-hills of mountains; on the ground there's no escaping from its features.