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The phrase "a casket" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a container for holding a deceased person's body, typically used in funerals.
Example: "The family chose a beautiful oak casket for the memorial service."
Alternatives: "a coffin" or "a burial box".
Exact(57)
("O.K., turn like you've got a casket").
I did not find a casket, but not to worry.
Why does every new girl arrive in a casket?
I saw a casket floating down the street.
Writer gives Mrs. Atherton's own account of how her husbandIs body happened to be brought home, not in a casket of sherry, but in a casket of rum.
They'll be fine, she says; she has a casket of diamonds.
His widow and children put his spectacles and his pen into a casket and buried it.
When Irving Berlin died, we did a casket blanket of white gardenias.
"You can go there when you're propped up in a casket," she said.
"I said I want to pick out a casket," she said.
What finally appears is a "casket of precious appearance containing twigs.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com