chore

IPA: tʃˈɔr

noun

  • A task, especially a difficult, unpleasant, or routine one.
  • (obsolete) A choir or chorus.

verb

  • (US, dated) To do chores.
  • (Scotland, dialect) To steal.
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Examples of "chore" in Sentences

  • Nagi decides her next chore is to master shopping.
  • The word chore connotes tedium, but that was not how I felt about them.
  • But the most time-consuming part of the chore is the transfer between baths.
  • Lack of credibility isn’t subject to “proof,” when the chore is to prove a negative.
  • Next to each chore is a box that the child can check off when they have completed their task.
  • Sternberg says his biggest chore is to make sure the community and surrounding areas know we care about them.
  • Ferry's main chore in Cleveland will be building a supporting cast around James, who was the only Cavs player at the news conference.
  • Rachel - who had previously felt attending Hebrew school a "chore" - came home from her first day and pronounced, "I want to go to Hebrew school everyday."
  • I'm also crocheting a ton of snowflakes and today's chore is to spray them liberally with starch to stiffen them up, then I'll attatch a little string and voila!
  • And the reason why it's a chore is not JUST because I'm lazy and shy; it, usually, also has to do with the second point above: A lot of times, people at campaign events (especially in Iowa and NH) are semi-pro campaign-event goers (or, as some articles last month had it, "political tourists").

Related Links

synonyms for choredescribing words for chore
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