From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishjukeboxjuke‧box /ˈdʒuːkbɒks $ -bɑːks/ noun [countable] DLa machine in bars, restaurants etc that plays music when you put money in it
Examples from the Corpus
jukebox• Before long every ghetto became a set and every soundstage a jukebox.• Drives for these disks cost from £1,000 to about £3,000, with huge jukeboxes costing as much as £250,000.• Memphis, I thought you was gon na get you a new jukebox.• The man used to come twice a week to collect the jukebox.• Pop music pounded from the jukebox.• They were dancing, a few of them, to the music on the jukebox.• You could have played the jukebox or something.• Within the Swan the jukebox was belting out a deafening selection of hits from the early sixties.