Whos mind is stayed upon thee
when the evening fall and shadows flee
He giveth inward peace
Oh He is the only perfect hiding place
He giveth perfect peace
Thou will keep Him in perfect peace whos min is stayed upon Thee
or
I know of no such chorus.
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.
The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.The Latin words for Roman peace is Pax Romana.
chorus
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A chorus is reapeated throughout a song.The main difference between a verse and a chorus is who is singing and who is not. A verse is usually the part of the story that is a song and the chorus is is the sing along part of the song.
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.
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.
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.
Wikipedia has it. See the link I will make below.
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