This has been said to refer to an enclosed wain, one with sides (DW288) but I believe that it was a wain with iron-bound wheels, and that possibility is discussed fully under iron-bound wain.
Some 'boxmakers' were actually box-iron makers but the making of metal boxes, for a variety of other purposes, became a specialist craft in Sheffield in the late years of the seventeenth century.
As a noun this was a toothed instrument used in the preparation of flax and hemp. However, the same word was used for other craft instruments (OED) so the meaning is not always clear.
The verb to breed has developed numerous shades of meaning but is most commonly used to describe the bringing forth of offspring, the propagation of the species.
A word found occasionally in clothiers’ inventories from the seventeenth century. It is a short length of cloth, sometimes a piece cut off because it is damaged (EDD).