Yes, the compound noun 'Boxing Day' is a proper noun, the name of a specific holiday.
If you mean box as in "I put my things in a box." Then, box is already a noun. If you mean box as in "I really like boxing." The noun would be boxing. This can also be used as a verb.
The noun card is used as a collective noun in sports, chiefly boxing, for a card of events; a list of events (matches) leading up to the main event.
The noun 'box' is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing. The word 'box' is also a verb: box, boxes, boxing, boxed.
The word 'box' (boxes) is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a container, usually rectangular or square in shape.The word 'box' (boxes, boxing, boxed) is a verb; to put in or provide with a box; to fight an opponent using one's fists as in the sport of boxing.
The area where a boxing fight is held is called a boxing ring.
there isn't boxing there is rythm boxing. there is boxing on wii sports though
in Olympic boxing you were a head guard in professional boxing you dont
West Edmonton Knights Boxing Club, The Avenue Boxing Club, Cougar Boxing Club, Panther Gym Boxing Club, Wind Warriors Boxing Club, Main Event Boxing Club
No, it is not an adverb. The word box can be a noun for an actual or metaphorical container, or a verb meaning to put into boxes, or to engage in pugilism (boxing, sparring).
The only standard collective nouns for the noun 'fighter' are a circus of fighter aircraft, a wing of fighter aircraft.Collective nouns are actually an informal part of language, any noun that suits the context can function as a collective noun, for example:a stable of fighters (boxing)a posse of crime fightersa caddy of grime fighters
boxing, because hockey is played in a rink and boxing is played in a ring