How many lines are in a chorus completely depends on the song and what the songwriter wants to say. The number of lines in a chorus is sometimes fewer than the verses, sometimes the same, sometimes more. I've listened to songs with four words as the chorus, some have as many as ten lines.
First, there's the first verse, then the chorus, then the second, then the chorus, then the bridge, then the chorus, and most likely the chorus again. Sometimes, bridges are placed in between verses before the chorus begins.
she's a girl with about 3 lines, for someone who would be in the chorus i think.
bass, guitar, or drums alone for a couple seconds in the beginning and then verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus. That's the basic structure but a lot of songs don't follow that (example: walking contradiction by green day, amazing song, it goes verse, verse, chorus, same verse as first one, chorus chorus).
In a song, there should be an intro, chorus THEN verse one. After each verse, there should be a chorus. But I'm not saying a song should be written like this: Hey, little monkey HEy hey hey! Little little monkey In da tree eating banana YUM YUM YUM Yum banana Then another 3-line verse, then chorus. (That was a really stupid song lol). If the verse is less than 6 lines (5 lines is the only exception), there probably shouldn't be a chorus after it. Usually in my songs, I put a chorus after 2 verses, but the conventional form is to put a chorus after 1 verse. It all depends on how you want the song to be written. If you want to have a chorus after more than 3 verses, your song should be extremely long. If your song is for an audience, I wouldn't suggest putting a chorus after more than 3 verses, because then the song would have to be long and the audience would get bored. Good luck!
Songs uusally are Verse-Chorus-Verse- Chorus (or variation of Chorus)- Bridge (optional) - final Chorus Verses tell the main story, the Chorus is about the essence of the storoy or the point the person is trying to make, the bridge gives like and after thought or side note about the story. Lyrically it's however you want. Usually lyrics are written in couplets, every two lines rhyme but it really is however you want to tell the story.
This is a refrain or chorus.
The chorus says the last lines in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, one of the chorus' functions is summarizing the onstage events. The very last lines indeed do just that. The chorus concludes with the ironic observation that Oedipus knows how to solve the Sphinx's riddle but cannot solve the riddle of his own existence. The chorus then asserts that happiness is fleeting and that life is pain.
Begin with a chorus and then find out rhyming lines and put it altogether in order.
First, there's the first verse, then the chorus, then the second, then the chorus, then the bridge, then the chorus, and most likely the chorus again. Sometimes, bridges are placed in between verses before the chorus begins.
Take the first two lines of the chorus and Google it!
Lyrics are the words to a song, so they make up a chorus. I think the distinction you are trying to make is between the verses and the chorus of a song, in which case the pattern is usually verse 1, chorus, verse 2, chorus, and so on.
she's a girl with about 3 lines, for someone who would be in the chorus i think.
It usually means a line or lines repeated every so often, like a chorus in a song.
Chorus - 2009 was released on: USA: 1 June 2009 (DVD premiere)
The Metallica song "The Unforgiven" was released on their fifth album in October 1991. The first four lines of the chorus are "What I've felt, What I've known, Never shined through in what I've shown, Never be". One can view the full lyrics on the "sing365" website.
A trapezium has normally no lines of symmetry unless it is an isosceles trapezium which has 1 line of symmetry
bass, guitar, or drums alone for a couple seconds in the beginning and then verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus. That's the basic structure but a lot of songs don't follow that (example: walking contradiction by green day, amazing song, it goes verse, verse, chorus, same verse as first one, chorus chorus).