A fork of Rural Dictionary
Continuous verb form for the act of doing chores.
Girlfriend: Hey babe, what are you up to? Boyfriend: I'm being a responsible boyfriend and choring it up, honey!
To annihilate the rest of the drugs, particularly Charley.
Hey, what’s Charley choring? S(h)e said s(h)e was going for a ride. Well at least I think that’s what s(h)e said.
Colloquial British term for the act of stealing or having stolen an item of interest. The term depicts the action of theft used in informal conversation, typically amongst youths. Originating in Scottish high schools the term has widely become used throughout England and is now recognised in most of the United Kingdom however the word does not appear in the Oxford English Dictionary and would be considered 'slang terminology'.
Example 1. (In description) The boys had chored enough merchandise from the shop that it was forced to close for the day. Example 2. (In conversation) Boy 1: "I've never seen that before, did you chore it?" Boy 2: "Aye, I chored it from the school".