Synonym: fisticuffs, packing, pugilism. Similar words: dioxin, antitoxin, neurotoxin, fixing, vexing, mixing, taxing, waxing. Meaning: ['bɒksɪŋ] n. 1. fighting with the fists 2. the enclosure of something in a package or box.
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(151) Willard's restoration of white dominance in heavyweight boxing in 1916 coincided with the re-establishment of the colour line.
(152) Muhammad Ali was banned from boxing and faced a jail term for standing up for his principles.
(153) King gave away at least $ 15, 000 in tickets, according to one Valley official with amateur boxing.
(154) Cunningham and Da Silva are rivals in tonight's boxing match.
(155) It need not have the medical checks or the rules on weight difference or the timed rounds of official boxing.
(156) The new bodies also recruited enough boxing promoters to persuade television broadcasters to take their champions seriously.
(157) Meg had a ringside seat to research her latest role as a tough boxing coach.
(158) There's ups and downs with boxing, layoffs are part of the sport and they can either help or hurt a guy. Floyd Mayweather Jr.
(159) Ali swaggered arrogantly into the boxing ring, as if he had already won the fight.
(160) Boxing is truly nocturnal; no other sport can make that claim.
(161) This involved quite elaborate dressing-up, and the fun and laughter of those Boxing Day nights was a treasure indeed.
(162) Let us imagine boxing without the masculinity. Let us imagine two ladies slugging hell out of one another in a ring.
(163) He lost 19 years of freedom and lost his chance at the world middleweight boxing title.
(164) But former boxing world champion Barry McGuigan was knocked out of the event with a blown engine on his Vauxhall Nova.
(165) Boxing White Hopes like Cooney do not have a prayer of toppling Tyson.
(166) Indeed, he was shrewd and tough, two weapons needed to survive in the jungle that is boxing.
(167) He lost his title unexpectedly to a man who is virtually unknown outside boxing circles.
(168) The chain had two boxing glove pendants and was valued at £65.
(169) But to see how false this justification, let us play the equality card. Let us imagine boxing without the masculinity.
(170) Or, George Bush visiting a soup kitchen and maybe Jeane Kirkpatrick at a boxing match.
(171) And who better to promote such knock-down prices than boxing champion(http://sentencedict.com/boxing.html), Chris Eubank.
(172) On Boxing Day her family was able to smile again when she gave birth to a son whom she has named Manus.
(173) Among other contributions, Neil Allen looks pityingly at athletics and boxing, and the stink is just as pronounced in soccer.
(174) Mohammed Ali, the former world heavyweight boxing champion, will appear on the 'Tonight' show next week.
(175) The heavyweight division of boxing consists of one great puncher and a string of weak punch lines.
(176) Sorry, Colin, but you learned the hard way about the harsh truths of the boxing world.
(177) It is no surprise that the gladiatorial sport of boxing was the most accessible route.
(178) Boxing is a lot of white men watching two black men beat each other up. Muhammad Ali
(179) Boxing: Gold medals are awarded in light flyweight, bantamweight, lightweight, welterweight, middleweight and heavyweight.
(180) He came home to discover that his war injuries had also ended his boxing career.
More similar words: dioxin, antitoxin, neurotoxin, fixing, vexing, mixing, taxing, waxing, coaxing, relaxing, perplexing, price fixing, intoxicating, box, boxer, box up, mailbox, postbox, gearbox, ballot box, box-office, pencil box, tinderbox, strongbox, pandora's box, witness box, toxic, oxidize, noxious, peroxide.