Synonym: choir, group, refrain, stanza, unison, verse. Similar words: anchor, forum, quorum, decorum, ruse, rush, virus, brush. Meaning: ['kɔːrəs] n. 1. any utterance produced simultaneously by a group 2. a group of people assembled to sing together 3. the part of a song where a soloist is joined by a group of singers 4. a body of dancers or singers who perform together 5. a company of actors who comment (by speaking or singing in unison) on the action in a classical Greek play. v. 1. utter in unison 2. sing in a choir.
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121. She was not a good dancer, just a dancer, just a chorus girl.
122. Day Six: With a salute from the dawn chorus, your cruiser leaves at 6.30am and heads back to Cologne.
123. Alcatel PABXs running Chorus began shipping earlier this year, with volumes expected soon.
124. A couple of weeks later the male chorus danced straight into him, elbows akimbo, and cracked his ribs.
125. There'd been a chorus of objection then and a flat refusal from Becky to stay with the younger children.
126. Charlie was dancing with Madge again, and with one of the chorus girls called Isabel.
127. Opera Chorus, under William Vendice's stalwart hand, brought a bit of needed oomph to an otherwise bland evening.
128. Bitter social divisions, briefly overshadowed by the chorus of demands for constitutional reform, came to the fore.
129. Dogs began to bark, triggering a rallying cry, a droning chorus broken occasionally by one or other's high-pitched howling.
130. Before long, Pink Floyd was backed by a chorus of open-mouthed caddies snoring away.
131. That same year Iggy Pop intoned the chorus to her feminist ballad Daw da Hiya.
132. I tripped back down the curving stairs, half-expecting a Busby Berkeley chorus to break into song.
133. Doctors, psychiatrists, police and civil servants have now joined a public chorus calling for tough, uniform national laws.
134. She was sure her gown would clash with the costumes of the chorus; she was getting a little husky.
135. Janet was in the chorus as well as being understudy, and the chorus line would now be as it was before Lisa came.
136. With a glad sigh of relief, I joined the chorus of nods.
137. Its sing-a-long chorus was tempered with a churning ending that seemed to stretch for half the song.
138. Getting more than five questions wrong jeopardizes acceptance into the chorus.
139. From the middle of the eighteenth century onwards a growing chorus of voices had championed the creation of a professional police.
140. He mocks death, laughs in its face, and others of his ilk laugh in a chorus all around him.
141. The chorus produced by hundreds of males can be heard over a mile away.
142. Few people have not woken to the sounds of the dawn chorus nor seen moths drawn to artificial lights as daylight fades.
143. Jimmy Carter and George Bush also have joined a growing chorus of eminent senior politicians in the quest for reform.
144. There has been a rising chorus of opposition to the governing parties from across the political spectrum.
144. Wish you will love sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
145. At one point he pretended to topple from the rope, a piece of showmanship that brought a chorus of screams.
146. Two men were discussing a brand-new opera in which the ladies of the chorus all wore wellington boots.
147. They sing a buoyant chorus song and march around the stage whilst performing evolutions.
148. Maybe your interest endured through high school or inspired a college credit for symphonic chorus.
149. In her place was her understudy, Miss Lisa Fennell, a young dancer usually seen in the chorus.
150. Tearing her eyes away from Emilio's face, Anne led the chorus of praise, restoring a fragile equilibrium.