A few of the words
- VINYL
- The 7-inch vinyl 45 rpm single, introduced by RCA Victor in 1949, became the jukebox's signature format — small, durable, and loud enough to fill a diner.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- CHROME
- Wurlitzer and Seeburg jukeboxes of the 1950s were famous for their gleaming chrome trim and colored light tubes, making them as much a visual showpiece as a musical one.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- NEEDLE
- The stylus — commonly called the needle — rides the tiny grooves of a record, translating the physical ridges into the music that fills the room.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- BOOGIE
- Boogie-woogie piano styles, rooted in the American South, fed directly into early rock and roll and were among the most-requested sounds on jukeboxes across the country in the 1950s.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
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The Jukebox: a free large-print word search
Free large-print jukebox word search — drop a coin, pick a single, and let the chrome and neon glow carry you back to the diner.
About Music & Film
A classic jukebox could hold up to 200 selections, its lit cabinet of chrome and bubbling neon becoming the centerpiece of every soda fountain and roadside diner. You'd flip through the title cards, drop in a coin, and press the buttons — and seconds later a 45 rpm single would swing onto the turntable and the whole room would shift. From a slow ballad to a flat-out boogie, the jukebox was the DJ, the dance floor invitation, and the heartbeat of the night all at once.
How to play
- 1Find a word from the list.Press the first letter and drag to the last — across, down or diagonally, forwards or back. Or tap the first letter, then the last.
- 2It stays marked.Found words get a soft teal line through them, on the grid and in the list.
- 3Make it comfortable.Use the A / A+ / A++ size control any time, or pinch the grid for a closer look.
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