0 a group of singers -- คณะขับร้องหมู่
the festival chorus.
1 a group of singers and dancers in a musical show. -- คณะขับร้องหมู่และนักเต้นรำ
2 part of a song repeated after each verse -- บทเพลงท่อนที่ร้องซ้ำ
The audience joined in the chorus.
3 something said or shouted by a number of people together -- พูดขึ้นพร้อมกัน
He was greeted by a chorus of cheers.
4 to sing or say together -- ร้องประสานเสียง
The children chorused ‘Goodbye, Miss Smith’.
With the increasingly spectacular historical librettos in the 1660s, choruses were once more adopted.
Even the texts of arias and choruses may tell us something about how bodies moved on the stage.
Expenses for the choruses came on top of extra costs for spectacle in these operas.
Most of the chorus's ostensible functions are thus detrimental to dramatic and theatrical logic.
The verbs on which a single consonant was preferred were benefited, biased, bused, chorused, focused, reneged, ricocheted.
The authors themselves of the songs organised orchestras, brass bands, and choruses to roam the city performing their compositions.
Among the substantial choral numbers are both male and female choruses, as well as mixed ensembles.
Their 'songs' are structured by contrasting textures and energies rather than verses and choruses.