0 a small box with a button or dials (= moving parts) that allow you to enter a particular series of numbers in order to open the box and get the keys kept inside it:
A lockbox gives agents access to your house key so they can show your home any time a buyer wants to see it.
A lock box is a small, sturdy metal box that’s affixed to your front door, with a key to your house inside.
Pending federal approval, the airline plans to install the guns in electronically coded lock boxes in all planes.
1 a service provided by banks in which a company's customers send payments directly to a bank so that the money can be paid immediately into the company's bank account:
2 a service provided by banks in which a company's customers send payments directly to a bank so that the money can be paid immediately into the company's bank account:
3 a strong, locked container used for storing money and valuable possessions:
State law requires that elevator keys be secured within 10 feet of the main entrance of high-rise buildings in a readily accessible lockbox.
There are the notices taped to doors and the string of lock boxes in the foyer, which he said would put off potential buyers.
The problem centers on checks sent to an IRS post office box in Pittsburgh, to be processed through a the bank's lockbox facility.
The bank took over the operation of "lockbox" offices set up to deposit passport fees and forward applications.
The company plans to keep customers' deposits in an electronic lock box that will be operated by the bank.
Wholesale lockboxes are for corporate-to-corporate payments and tend to be higher dollar amounts than retail lockbox transactions.
Carly returns the lockbox having no desire to disturb the precious memories.