Choose in a sentence as a verb

If you choose to 'come out' of your office and engage with the family then that is your choice.

Luckily Lenovo has given me a matrix to help me choose.

Ideally, they force the person being squeezed out to choose to quit rather than actually be fired.

For those that choose to stay, they will forever live with their past action of having turned down lots of money to work there.

Also, I failed to mention that there's a big difference between being cheap because you have to and being cheap because you choose to.

Lets choose an example, of which I have had my hands in with my tech support job.*\nGoal: "Download Firefox"First, the user was using IE.

Unless you have a good reason, you better choose a high pri team.> As you grow professionally, the domain of these tasks becomes > larger.

But, again, there are always trade-offs and founders should weigh these carefully in deciding whether the Kima way is the way they want to choose.

Politicians need to understand that if they take on the internet and choose record labels over their own constituents they cannot expect support from their own political base.

But how else is someone with nontechnical parents supposed to get started?It's sooo much different when it's something you choose to do with your free time, rather than something half-assedly forced on you by parents or school curriculum.

Plaintiffs assertion of a fundamental right to their own bodily and physical health, which includes what foods they do and do not choose to consume for themselves and their families is similarly unavailing because plaintiffs do not have a fundamental right to obtain any food they wish.

Choose definitions

verb

pick out, select, or choose from a number of alternatives; "Take any one of these cards"; "Choose a good husband for your daughter"; "She selected a pair of shoes from among the dozen the salesgirl had shown her"

See also: take select

verb

select as an alternative over another; "I always choose the fish over the meat courses in this restaurant"; "She opted for the job on the East coast"

See also: prefer

verb

see fit or proper to act in a certain way; decide to act in a certain way; "She chose not to attend classes and now she failed the exam"