Definition
Past tense of chorus; spoke, sang, or shouted together as a group.
Etymology
Regular past tense formation from 'chorus' (to sing or speak together) using the standard '-ed' suffix. The verb 'chorus' derives from the noun 'chorus' (a group of singers), which comes from Greek 'choros.'
Kelly Says
When a group 'chorused' their agreement in ancient Greek theater, they weren't just adding sound—they represented collective consciousness, the voice of society itself, which is why even today when we 'chorus' agreement, it carries weight that individual statements don't.
Translations
ARالعربية
أُلحِينَ
al-hi-na
CSČeština
sborově
sbor-ove
DADansk
koristeret
kor-i-ste-ret
DEDeutsch
gechorust
geh-kor-oost
ELΕλληνικά
χορωδία
cho-ro-di-a
ESEspañol
coroado
kor-o-ah-doh
FAفارسی
خوانده شده
khoan-deh shodeh
FISuomi
kuoroitettu
kuo-ro-i-tet-tu
FRFrançais
choralisé
kor-ah-lee-zay
HIहिन्दी
संगीतकार
sa-ngeet-ka-ar
IDBahasa Indonesia
dipadukan dengan paduan suara
di-pa-du-kan de-ngan pa-dua-an su-a
ITItaliano
coroato
ko-ra-toh
JA日本語
コーラス化された
ko-ra-su-ka-sa-re-ta
KO한국어
합창처럼
hap-chang-cheoreom
MSBahasa Melayu
padukan suara
pa-du-kan su-a
NLNederlands
gechorust
geh-kor-oost
NONorsk
koristeret
kor-i-ste-ret
PLPolski
z chórem
z kho-rem
PTPortuguês
coroado
ko-ro-ah-doh
RUРусский
хорусованный
xor-oo-soh-van-nyy
SWKiswahili
kuimba
kwee-mba
TAதமிழ்
சொல்லப்பட்டது
sol-la-pa-thu
THไทย
ร้องเป็นโจร
roeng ben jor
TRTürkçe
koro edilmiş
ko-ro eh-di-lish
UKУкраїнська
хорований
khor-ova-niy
VITiếng Việt
hợp ca
hóp-ca
ZUZU
ukhohlisiwe
u-kho-hlis-i-we