| 释义 | 
		Definition of jukebox in English: jukeboxnounˈdʒuːkbɒksˈdʒukˌbɑks 1A machine that automatically plays a selected musical recording when a coin is inserted. 投币式自动点唱机 Example sentencesExamples -  The jukebox has fallen out of favour in recent years, due to the rise in popularity of the personal stereo amongst pub-goers.
 -  But I'm concerned that live music is giving way to jukeboxes.
 -  Pubs usually stage karaoke evenings or have jukeboxes churning out the hits.
 -  Councilmen visited drugstores and restaurants in the city, demanding that proprietors remove all rock records from their jukeboxes.
 -  I hung up and went to check out the selection on the jukebox.
 -  The jukeboxes in the bars were ringing with recordings made in Chicago and New York, rich with the promises of new opportunities.
 -  But it's worth considering the cost: I don't have to buy or rent the jukebox, and it's just twenty-five cents per song.
 -  Someone throws a few coins into the jukebox and we are bombarded by Pink's ‘Lets get the party started’.
 -  Blue walks over to his usual table, but stops at the jukebox first and selects a song.
 -  One of their friends repaired jukeboxes for a living.
 -  I peered into the jukebox's window, squinting and spinning my head with the record in an attempt to read the label.
 -  It's a compilation from the start of her career when she recorded with many bands and most of her records ended up in jukeboxes.
 -  The lack of a jukebox, dancefloor or fruit machines is in keeping with the York Brewery theme of pubs for drinking, eating and talking.
 -  This is one track you're not likely to find on too many jukeboxes in red states.
 -  I glanced over my shoulder to where Ashley was singing along by the jukebox.
 -  He put a nickel in the jukebox and tossed back a few cold ones.
 -  As they watched, one of the players shambled over to the jukebox and fed a handful of coins into it.
 -  In Harlem, angry fans removed his records from jukeboxes and trampled them in the street.
 -  If you scooted them all a few inches or so this way, you could fit both a pinball machine and a jukebox along that wall.
 -  He wants pool tables, a jukebox, internet access, a proper bar and any other ideas the children come up with.
 
 - 1.1Computing  A device that stores several computer disks in such a way that data can be read from any of them.
〔计算机〕多盘存储装置(可从任一磁盘读取数据) Example sentencesExamples -  You can even have a DVD-RAM jukebox in practically any size that meets your needs.
 -  The other traditional data storage, nearline archiving, involves moving the data to a slower media such as robotic tape and laser or magnetic optical jukeboxes.
 -  While DVD-RAM for proprietary storage jukeboxes may be a viable prospect, the technology is losing ground in the optical standards race.
 -  In order to increase disk capacity in a jukebox, the physical size of the unit must be increased, which increases the cost of the unit.
 -  DVD jukeboxes with 4.7GB capacity per disc may be a more suitable choice in situations where rapid data access is concerned.
 
  
 
 Origin1930s: from juke + box. In the USA a juke was a nightclub or bar that provided food, drinks, and music for dancing. The word was based on a term from the Creole language of the Gullah, an African-American people living on the coast of South Carolina and nearby islands. In their language juke meant ‘disorderly’. 
    Definition of jukebox in US English: jukeboxnounˈjo͞okˌbäksˈdʒukˌbɑks 1A machine that automatically plays a selected musical recording when a coin is inserted. 投币式自动点唱机 Example sentencesExamples -  Pubs usually stage karaoke evenings or have jukeboxes churning out the hits.
 -  The jukebox has fallen out of favour in recent years, due to the rise in popularity of the personal stereo amongst pub-goers.
 -  In Harlem, angry fans removed his records from jukeboxes and trampled them in the street.
 -  I glanced over my shoulder to where Ashley was singing along by the jukebox.
 -  I hung up and went to check out the selection on the jukebox.
 -  If you scooted them all a few inches or so this way, you could fit both a pinball machine and a jukebox along that wall.
 -  Blue walks over to his usual table, but stops at the jukebox first and selects a song.
 -  This is one track you're not likely to find on too many jukeboxes in red states.
 -  But I'm concerned that live music is giving way to jukeboxes.
 -  Councilmen visited drugstores and restaurants in the city, demanding that proprietors remove all rock records from their jukeboxes.
 -  Someone throws a few coins into the jukebox and we are bombarded by Pink's ‘Lets get the party started’.
 -  As they watched, one of the players shambled over to the jukebox and fed a handful of coins into it.
 -  I peered into the jukebox's window, squinting and spinning my head with the record in an attempt to read the label.
 -  The lack of a jukebox, dancefloor or fruit machines is in keeping with the York Brewery theme of pubs for drinking, eating and talking.
 -  He put a nickel in the jukebox and tossed back a few cold ones.
 -  One of their friends repaired jukeboxes for a living.
 -  But it's worth considering the cost: I don't have to buy or rent the jukebox, and it's just twenty-five cents per song.
 -  It's a compilation from the start of her career when she recorded with many bands and most of her records ended up in jukeboxes.
 -  The jukeboxes in the bars were ringing with recordings made in Chicago and New York, rich with the promises of new opportunities.
 -  He wants pool tables, a jukebox, internet access, a proper bar and any other ideas the children come up with.
 
 - 1.1Computing  A device that stores several computer disks in such a way that data can be read from any of them.
〔计算机〕多盘存储装置(可从任一磁盘读取数据) Example sentencesExamples -  You can even have a DVD-RAM jukebox in practically any size that meets your needs.
 -  While DVD-RAM for proprietary storage jukeboxes may be a viable prospect, the technology is losing ground in the optical standards race.
 -  The other traditional data storage, nearline archiving, involves moving the data to a slower media such as robotic tape and laser or magnetic optical jukeboxes.
 -  In order to increase disk capacity in a jukebox, the physical size of the unit must be increased, which increases the cost of the unit.
 -  DVD jukeboxes with 4.7GB capacity per disc may be a more suitable choice in situations where rapid data access is concerned.
 
  
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