Phoenix - Lasso
As a piece of music, "chorus" would refer to something sung by a large group, perhaps the entire cast, typically including soprano, alto, tenor, and bass. This is in contrast to something sung by a soloist pr maybe two or three voices. The word "chorus" could also refer to that group of singers.
The problem with bare foot running is that the leg would have nothing to absorb the pounding as you are running and having your total body weight coming down on your feet all the time would cause some serious injuries.
You would start with why you think you should win, or be elected. That would conclude the main build of the essay, and you would add any detail like why you are running.
I would suspect warped rotors.
In music Binary, Ternary and Rondo are like the layout of a song. So say A represents a verse, B a chorus and C would represent a Bridge! Binary would be A,B (Verse, chorus) Ternary would be A,B,A (Verse, chorus, verse) Then Rondo would be A,B,A,C,A (Verse, chorus, verse, bridge, verse)
Running on rocks
The word 'chorus' is only capitalised when it forms part of a title, either of a musical group or a composition. For example, Handel's famous Hallelujah Chorus is always capitalised. If a singing group had a name such as "Chorus Singers", both words would also begin with a capital.
I've read in several places that pouring vinegar down the dishwasher drain (a lot) and then running the empty dishwasher will kill the ants and keep them from coming back.
I can't believe someone would write that. I was in a greek play and I was chorus and the chorus were just townsfolk who told the story. The spoke in rhyme.
Verbs are doing words. E.g. He was running (running would be the verb) Adverbs describe a verb, so it describes how someone is doing something E.g. He was running quickly (quickly would be the adverb)
Toast, Cereal, Bagel, Eggs
"In the wind" in that context would mean something that was coming in the future