To enclose in a room.
To place in a chamber, as a round of ammunition.
To reside in or occupy a chamber or chambers.
To create or modify a gun to be a specific caliber.
To prepare an offensive, defensive, or counteroffensive action by drawing a limb or weapon to a position where it may be charged with kinetic energy.
One of the bullet-holding compartments in the cylinder of a revolver.
The legislature or division of the legislature itself.
The room used for deliberation by a legislature.
Any enclosed space occupying or similar to a room.
A short piece of ordnance or cannon which stood on its breech without any carriage, formerly used chiefly for celebrations and theatrical cannonades.
The private office of a judge.
One of the two atria or two ventricles of the heart.
The private room of an individual, especially of someone wealthy or noble.
A single law office in a building housing several.
The area holding the ammunition round at the initiation of its discharge.
A bedroom.
An enlarged space in an underground tunnel of a burrowing animal.
To enclose (something) in a box or other container; specifically, to place (a deceased person's body) in a coffin; to coffin, to encoffin.
To deposit (sample coins) in a pyx; (by extension) to test (such coins) for the fineness of metal and weight before a mint issues them to the public.
A box used in a mint as a place to deposit sample coins intended to have the fineness of their metal and their weight tested before the coins are issued to the public.
A small, usually round container used to hold the host (“consecrated bread or wafer of the Eucharist”), especially when bringing communion to the sick or others unable to attend Mass.
A (small) box; a casket, a coffret.