Chorus in a sentence as a noun

Then within the next twelve months to have written the chorus:"I should be so lucky Luck, lucky, lucky I should be so lucky in love"

I know that my sympathies and $4 gets you a Starbucks latte, but I just want to add my voice to the chorus of people saying that this situation sucks.

' I asked my sophomore friend in chorus what the jumbled letters, numbers, returns, spaces, indents, and parentheses on her failed test meant.

This Congress?If they do anything, it will be to enact legislation to make what's going on appear more legal, in a chorus of harumphs.

I'd be curious if that created a chorus of dissatisfaction, but I'd never heard of anything that would have caused his ouster.

Chorus in a sentence as a verb

Their most successful records will kick into the chorus with a line which encapsulates the entire emotional meaning of the song.

The people who got their hands on them said "no wait, you really have to try this, it's a totally new experience", but that had to compete with a loud chorus of "meh", which I certainly understand.

This is fine, I've never fault a programmer for writing less-than-optimal code, but often programmers tend to contribute their voices to the chorus of "Canvas is slow", regardless of looking for fault prior to their declaration.

No disrespect to Sam in any way -- he truly seems like a brilliant guy with a chorus of influential people behind him -- but I've been on a successful-person wikipedia binge as of late, and it's become very, very clear that a person's upbringing almost determines whether or not they're going to be successfull, which saddens me.

Cries of protest against the slackness of American education, hitherto raised only by a small number of educational critics, were now taken up by television, mass magazines, businessmen, scientists, politicians, admirals, and university presidents, and soon swelled into a national chorus of self-reproach.

Chorus definitions

noun

any utterance produced simultaneously by a group; "a chorus of boos"

noun

a group of people assembled to sing together

noun

the part of a song where a soloist is joined by a group of singers

See also: refrain

noun

a body of dancers or singers who perform together

noun

a company of actors who comment (by speaking or singing in unison) on the action in a classical Greek play

verb

utter in unison; "`yes,' the children chorused"

verb

sing in a choir

See also: choir