chore
/tʃɔː(r)/ (bre, ipa) · /tʃɔːr/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈchȯr/ (ame, mw)
chore — noun
- choresingular
- choresplural
1. a routine activity that someone must do regularly to keep a home or farm running
a routine activity that someone must do regularly to keep a home or farm running, such as washing dishes, cleaning floors, or doing laundry
Every Saturday morning, the children divide up the household chores before going out to play.
collocation: household chores
Aiko's least favourite chore is scrubbing the bathtub after her brothers have used it.
Doing the laundry is a chore that takes Leila about an hour each weekend.
The farm chores at dawn include feeding the chickens and collecting fresh eggs.
Wen's brother offered to swap chores so she could skip washing the dishes tonight.
- task
broader term — a task can be any piece of work, not necessarily routine or domestic
- duty
more formal; emphasises moral obligation or responsibility rather than everyday routine
- errand
refers to a short trip taken to accomplish a specific purpose (e.g., going to the post office), not a job done at home
- job
neutral and wide-ranging; can refer to paid work, whereas a chore is usually unpaid household work
- leisure
chores are obligatory work; leisure is free-time relaxation
文法句型
plural form: chores
often preceded by household / domestic / everyday
用法筆記
This sense is most common in the plural form 'chores' when listing a set of routine household tasks. Singular use typically singles out one specific task from that set (e.g., 'scrubbing the bathtub is my least favourite chore'). The modifier 'household', 'domestic', or 'daily' frequently precedes it.
常見錯誤
2. an activity that feels tedious, tiring, or disagreeable to complete, even though
an activity that feels tedious, tiring, or disagreeable to complete, even though it may not require much physical effort
Filling out tax forms is a chore that Ravi dreads every spring.
pattern: a chore that + relative clause
After his birthday, Tomás viewed writing thank-you notes as a tiresome chore.
collocation: tiresome chore
Though it takes just ten minutes, folding laundry became a chore Beatriz kept putting off.
The children tried to avoid the chore of raking leaves in the front yard.
What once seemed like a fun hobby now felt like an unpleasant chore to Nadia.
- drudgery
stronger, emphasising monotonous, exhausting, or menial work that wears you down over time
- bore
focuses purely on the lack of interest or excitement, without the sense of obligation
- burden
suggests a heavy weight or responsibility; more serious in tone than 'chore'
- nuisance
milder — something annoying but not necessarily tedious or time-consuming
- pleasure
a chore is something you dislike doing; a pleasure is something you enjoy
文法句型
a chore to + infinitive
feel like a chore
become a chore
用法筆記
Distinguish from Sense 1: this sense emphasises the speaker's negative feelings (boredom, reluctance, dislike) rather than the routine nature of the task. The task itself may be non-routine — even a one-time activity can be called a chore if it is disagreeable. Common evaluative modifiers include 'tedious', 'tiresome', 'unpleasant', 'boring', and 'dreaded'.