Noun
One of a choir; a singer in a chorus.
One who leads a choir in church music.
Source: Webster's dictionaryDocuments suggest that he first visited Rome in 1537, when he is listed as a chorister at the Santa Maria Maggiore basilica. Source: Internet
By the late 1990s the organisation of the fair was taken on by the boy chorister parents who broadened it to the full scale fair, on Palace Green, in front of Ely Cathedral. Source: Internet
In his childhood he was a chorister at Saint Andrews Church ( Church of England ), London Road, Derby – 'the railwaymen's church' (demolished 1970). Source: Internet
Haydn passed his audition with Reutter, and after several months of further training moved to Vienna (1740), where he worked for the next nine years as a chorister. Source: Internet
By the late 1990’s the organisation of the fair was taken on by the boy chorister parents. Source: Internet
He says one woman was singing in the supermarket when another chorister recognised the song and began singing herself. Source: Internet