| coffer | To put into a coffer | en |
| coffer | The chamber of a canal lock; also, a caisson or a cofferdam | en |
| coffer | A casket, chest, or trunk; especially, one used for keeping money or other valuables | en |
| coffer | To secure from leaking, as a shaft, by ramming clay behind the masonry or timbering | en |
| coffer | To form with or in a coffer or coffers; to furnish with a coffer or coffers | en |
| coffer | > In furniture, a strong box for storing valuables | en |
| coffer | a chest especially for storing valuables an ornamental sunken panel in a ceiling or dome | en |
| coffer | Fig | en |
| coffer | Treasure or funds; usually in the plural | en |
| coffer | a supply or store of money, often belonging to an organization | en |
| coffer | to decorate something, especially a ceiling, with coffers | en |
| coffer | to put money or valuables in a coffer | en |
| coffer | a strongbox: a strong chest or box used for keeping money or valuables safe | en |
| coffer | a cofferdam | en |
| coffer | A panel deeply recessed in the ceiling of a vault, dome, or portico; a caisson | en |
| coffer | 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 | en |
| coffer | A chest to keep treasure in | en |
| coffer | a chest used for storing clothing Torm has tall, upright coffers, Wootton has a low one | en |
| coffer | a chest especially for storing valuables | en |
| coffer | In architecture, a recessed panel in a ceiling | en |
| coffer | multi-functional traveling chest with handles and a domed lid but without feet, usually made of oak | en |
| coffer | an ornamental sunken panel in a ceiling or dome | en |
| coffer | The coffers of an organization consist of the money that it has to spend, imagined as being collected together in one place. The proceeds from the lottery go towards sports and recreation, as well as swelling the coffers of the government. In architecture, a square or polygonal ornamental sunken panel used in a series as decoration for a ceiling or vault. Coffers were probably originally formed by wooden beams crossing one another to produce a grid. The earliest surviving examples were made of stone by the ancient Greeks and Romans. Coffering was revived in the Renaissance and was common in Baroque and Neoclassical architecture | en |
| coffer | sturdy chest or box in which valuables are stored, strongbox; treasure chest; treasury; funds; cofferdam; floating dock;(Architecture) ornamental sunken panel (in a dome, flat ceiling) isim | en |
| coffer | A coffer is a large strong chest used for storing valuable objects such as money or gold and silver | en |
| coffer | one of a series of recessed panels in a ceiling, usually done in plaster | en |
| coffer | Recessed panel in a wooden, stucco or stone ceiling | en |
| coffer | A recessed decorative panel in a ceiling, vault, or dome | en |
| coffer | Recessed panel or dome in ceiling | en |
| coffer | A chest, originally for storing valuables, but now used to refer to one made in the 17th century More information about early Tudor coffers | en |
| coffer | store in a chest, place in a coffer; (Architecture) provide with ornamental sunken area, supply with coffer fiil | en |
| coffer | The sunken area created between the crossing of structural members Coffers often appear in a flat ceiling or on the interior surface of a dome They are often the focus of decoration and serve also to lighten the weight of the structure | en |
| coffer | A multi-functional traveling chest with handles and a domed lid but without feet, usually made of oak | en |
| coffer | To create a surface using recessed panels in ceilings, vaults or domes | en |
| coffer | Decorative recessed panel in a ceiling | en |
| coffers | plural of coffer | en |