Usually means: Repeated sections in a song.
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We found 15 dictionaries that define the word choruses:

General (13 matching dictionaries)
  1. choruses: Merriam-Webster
  2. choruses: Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
  3. choruses: Collins English Dictionary
  4. choruses: Vocabulary.com
  5. Choruses, choruses: Wordnik
  6. choruses: Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
  7. choruses: Wiktionary
  8. Choruses, choruses: Dictionary.com
  9. choruses: Cambridge Essential American English Dictionary
  10. Choruses: Online Plain Text English Dictionary
  11. Choruses: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary
  12. choruses: FreeDictionary.org
  13. choruses: TheFreeDictionary.com

Business (1 matching dictionary)
  1. choruses: Legal dictionary

Computing (1 matching dictionary)
  1. choruses: Encyclopedia

(Note: See chorus as well.)

Definitions from Wiktionary (Chorus)

noun:  (Ancient Greece, historical)
noun:  A group of singers and dancers in a theatrical performance or religious festival who commented on the main performance in speech or song.
noun:  A song performed by the singers of such a group.
noun:  (by extension, chiefly British, theater, historical) An actor who reads the prologue and epilogue of a play, and sometimes also acts as a commentator or narrator; also, a portion of a play read by this actor.
noun:  A group of singers performing together; a choir; specifically, such a group singing together in a musical, an opera, etc., as distinct from the soloists; an ensemble.
noun:  (by extension) A group of people in a performance who recite together.
noun:  An instance of singing by a group of people.
noun:  (figuratively)
noun:  A group of people, animals, or inanimate objects who make sounds together.
noun:  The noise or sound made by such a group.
noun:  A group of people who express a unanimous opinion.
noun:  The opinion expressed by such a group.
noun:  (music)
noun:  A piece of music, especially one in a larger work such as an opera, written to be sung by a choir in parts (for example, by sopranos, altos, tenors, and basses).
noun:  A part of a song which is repeated between verses to emphasize the song's content; a refrain.
noun:  The main part of a pop song played after the introduction.
noun:  A group of organ pipes or organ stops intended to be played simultaneously; a compound stop; also, the sound made by such pipes or stops.
noun:  (often attributively) A feature or setting in electronic music that makes one instrument sound like many.
noun:  (Christianity) A simple, often repetitive, song intended to be sung in a group during informal worship.
noun:  (jazz) The improvised solo section in a small group performance.
verb:  (transitive)
verb:  To sing (a song), express (a sentiment), or recite or say (words) in chorus.
verb:  To express concurrence with (something said by another person); to echo.
verb:  (rare) To provide (a song) with a chorus or refrain.
verb:  (intransitive)
verb:  To sing the chorus or refrain of a song.
verb:  To sing, express, or say in, or as if in, unison.
verb:  To echo in unison another person's words.
verb:  Of animals: to make cries or sounds together.
noun:  (Ancient Greece, historical) A group of singers and dancers in a theatrical performance or religious festival who commented on the main performance in speech or song.
noun:  (Ancient Greece, historical) A song performed by the singers of such a group.
▸ Also see chorus


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