pyx cloth

from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Pyx \Pyx\, n. [L. pyxis a box, Gr. pyxi`s a box, especially of
   boxwood, fr. py`xos the box tree or boxwood. See {Box} a
   receptacle.] [Written also {pix}.]
   1. (R. C. Ch.) The box, case, vase, or tabernacle, in which
      the host is reserved.
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   2. A box used in the British mint as a place of deposit for
      certain sample coins taken for a trial of the weight and
      fineness of metal before it is sent from the mint.
      --Mushet.
      [1913 Webster]

   3. (Naut.) The box in which the compass is suspended; the
      binnacle. --Weale.
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   4. (Anat.) Same as {Pyxis}.
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   {Pyx cloth} (R. C. Ch.), a veil of silk or lace covering the
      pyx.

   {Trial of the pyx}, the annual testing, in the English mint,
      of the standard of gold and silver coins. --Encyc. Brit.
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