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".
by ASRock May 27, 2010
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Its a positive state of mind while doing chores
Instead of the, "ultrachirp," smoke the "j-stick," and be, "choreful," all these task are necessary to compete the objective.
by emilejfagerstromiv February 10, 2019
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To steal or rob from somewhere or someone
you chored that from his house didnt you
by jamie451 June 03, 2008
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A routinely task that usually spends much of a person's time and patience. Things most people hate doing but have no other choice. Only lazy people, people who live like pigs and exaggeratingly controlling men that abuse their wives and sit around doing nothing but drink beer do not do chores.
I hate doing chores. That's why I'm married.
by shulltheantisocial June 27, 2010
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to steal or a thief. Romany word 'te chorel' to steal. see also chor. Used in pockets all over the UK where chavs are descended from Romany Gypsies. (e.g., recently heard in Chatham, Kent)
he's a bleeding chore, he's always choring from shops
by klidenengro February 01, 2004
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Verb; similar to yoink.
Originating in British schools, this is the acting of taking another's possession without owner's consent; albeit on a smaller scale. For example, you could chore someone's detention slip (usual reply: "Why should I care? You've just chored my ticket to Hell. Thanks."), whilst you couldn't chore something larger, eg. a quarry.

The chorification of this possession is almost always accompanied with a loud, high pitched squeal of "CHORED!"
Lawyer: This, you honour, is the knife found at the scene of the crime.
Jury member: *swipes bag* CHORED!!! *runs off*
Judge: Court adjourned on account of ... THAT nob over there.
by GrandpaGroove January 23, 2008
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British slang used amongst youths for having something stolen
"Some pikey chored my bike last night"
by Nokia God November 06, 2016
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