The two words both exist in British English. They do not mean the same thing and are not interchangeable.
quire
choir
Choir, esquire, require,
choir (definition: group of singers)
You sound it out and enter answer to question
It is the area up by the alter that often includes where the church musical group sings. With a slightly different spelling, it can also mean the musical sheets the choir holds from which they sing.
The general term for different words that mean the same thing is "synonyms". When the words also sound alike (as with the archaic "quire" and modern "choir"), they are considered variant spellings of the same word.
Wire, fire, liar.................... edit: quire? but ull hav to check that one
No, that is not the right spelling;The correct spelling is choir.Some example sentences are:What time does the choir start?I am going to join the school choir.The community choir were stunning.
The British spelling of skillful is skillful in a British accent
Quentin Quire was created in 2002.
A quire is a term referring to a twentieth of a ream of paper. An example sentence is: Please pick up a quire of paper for me.