Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Wiktionary
n. A line of performers in a revue or other show, dancing in unison.
WordNet
n. a body of dancers or singers who perform together [syn: chorus]
Wikipedia
A chorus line is a large group of dancers who together perform synchronized routines, usually in musical theatre. Sometimes, singing is also performed. Chorus line dancers in Broadway musicals and revues have been referred to by slang terms such as ponies, gypsies and twirlies. Ballet uses the term corps de ballet.
Usage examples of "chorus line".
Sam was not happy about her joining the chorus line at the Estradido Hotel.
Anyway, when you read in the Torah about Noah living to be nine hundred and Moses living to be a hundred and forty, well, guess who led the chorus line in the “.
They danced and sang, then broke their chorus line to move out along the cleared floor, inviting diners to dance with them.
I even have a chorus line that can get across the stage without tripping over either of their left feet.
Heller, jockeying tractor-beam throttles and flying now on a curving course, began very neatly to place the wind devils around the yellow mist in a circle, a hungry, obscene chorus line of glittering colors shrieking out a mocking song of doom.
This had led to the near-obsession with teamwork which had inspired his colleagues to dub him Soft-shoe Sidney, on the assumption that he was at his best working in front of a chorus line.
David had also hired the chorus line from the Royal Swazi Spa to provide a floor-show.
It was a Treblinka, an Auschwitz, an infinite chorus line locked in a mechanized dance of death.
She worked in the chorus line at Small's Paradise Inn, and she looked strictly on the make.