The word 'chorus' carries within it one of the oldest performance traditions in Western civilization. In ancient Greece, the chorus was not merely a group of singers but the heart of dramatic performance — a collective voice that danced, sang, narrated, and commented on the action of tragedies and comedies. The word itself, Greek 'khorós,' originally meant a round dance or the group that performed it.
The Greek 'khorós' had multiple related meanings: a dance performed in a circle, the group of people who performed the dance, and the place where they danced. This cluster of meanings — action, performers, and venue — reflects the centrality of choral dance in Greek religious and civic life. Festivals in honor of Dionysus featured choruses of men and boys performing dithyrambs (choral hymns), and it was from these performances that Greek tragedy is believed to have evolved.
In Athenian drama of the fifth century BCE, the chorus typically consisted of twelve to fifteen performers who sang, chanted, and danced in the orchestra (the circular dancing area) while individual actors performed on the raised stage. The chorus served multiple dramatic functions: narrating background events, expressing communal emotions, offering moral commentary, and interacting with the main characters. In Aeschylus's earliest tragedies, the chorus was the dominant element; by Euripides's time, its role had diminished but remained essential.
Latin borrowed the word as 'chorus,' retaining both the Greek dramatic sense and the broader meaning of a group singing together. Through Latin, the word entered the European languages, generating Italian 'coro,' French 'choeur,' Spanish 'coro,' and German 'Chor.'
English acquired the word twice from the same Greek source, producing the doublet pair 'chorus' and 'choir.' 'Choir' arrived first, in the thirteenth century, through Old French 'cuer' (later 'choeur'), and initially referred to the group of singers in a church and to the part of the church where they sat. 'Chorus' was borrowed directly from Latin in the sixteenth century, bringing with it the classical dramatic associations and eventually the musical sense of a song's recurring refrain.
The refrain sense — the part of a song that is repeated after each verse, typically sung by all voices together — emerged in the seventeenth century. This meaning extended naturally from the idea of a group singing together: the chorus is the section where everyone joins in. In popular music, the chorus became the structural and emotional center of a song, the hook that listeners remember and sing along with.
The Greek root also gave English 'choreography' (the writing or designing of dance, from 'khorós' + 'graphein,' to write), 'choral' (relating to a choir or chorus), 'chorale' (a hymn tune, borrowed from German 'Choral'), and 'chorister' (a member of a choir). 'Terpsichore,' the Greek Muse of dance, contains the same root in her name's first element (though some etymologists dispute this connection).
The further etymology of Greek 'khorós' is uncertain. Some scholars connect it to Proto-Indo-European *gʰer- (to enclose, to grasp), which would link it to the idea of a circle — an enclosed space for dancing. Others see a connection to *gʰer- in the sense of 'to desire' or 'to enjoy,' linking the dance to pleasure. The uncertainty is characteristic of words whose histories extend beyond the written record.
In modern usage, 'chorus' functions in several distinct registers. In classical music, a chorus is a large vocal ensemble, often paired with an orchestra (as in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony or Brahms's German Requiem). In musical theater and popular music, the chorus is the catchy, repeated section of a song. In everyday speech, 'a chorus of' means 'many voices saying the same thing simultaneously' — 'a chorus of approval,' 'a chorus of complaints.' All these uses preserve the ancient core: multiple voices