Now ask the chooser of the second card what the name of hers is, and repeat the operation.
This force must not be insisted upon if the chooser be at all unwilling, and the performer must resort to the alternate ruse (which many prefer entirely to the force) of a change.
Gather up the five cards, the selected one being at the bottom, replace them on the top of the pack, and ask the chooser of the card to count them off himself.
The chooser of this card is requested to name it, when the performer informs the company that, if they watch closely enough, they will see the one card change into the other.
The chooser thereupon pushes the card between the others, which are not opened out by the performer, but merely presented in a compact body.
On receiving, as you will, a reply in the affirmative, turn the card face downwards and proceed to the next chooser of a card, and so on, until all are satisfied.
The act of forcing a card consists in inducing the chooser of a card to select from those proffered by you any particular card you please.
Force a card, say the eight of hearts, have it replaced in the pack, and re-force it on someone else so far removed from the first chooser that the possibility of their seeing that they have both selected the same card is avoided.
In the event of the chooser naming a card other than that manipulated by the performer, he must at once look through the pack for it, and first palming it, boldly declare that it is not in the pack, which he will give to be inspected.
Hail, chooser of the mightiest, and teacher of the wise!
It is absurd to choose by contested party election an impartial chooser of Ministers.
Subject therefore to the two minor, but still not inconsiderable, defects I have named, Parliament conforms itself accurately enough, both as a chooser of executives and as a legislature, to the formed opinion of the country.
But Brynhild he bade To the helm to betake her, And said that Death-chooser She should become; And that no better Might ever be born Into the world, If fate would not spoil it.
Call a vaudeville man a liar and he may laugh at you--call him a chooser and you'll have to fight him.
A chooser damages the originator of the material without himself getting very far.
Thou shalt yet see me as the Slain's Chooser would see her speech-friend; for there is much to do ere we win wheat-harvest in Burgdale.
Yet I would not have thee think of me as a Chooser of the Slain, a warrior maiden, or as of one who hath no joy save in the battle whereto she biddeth others.
How was it, thou Chooser of the Slain, Did I die in thine arms, and thereafter did thy mouth-kiss wake me again?
Indeed, in such passages it is with the Freedom of the wrong-chooser that he is primarily concerned: since it is the wrong-chooser that he especially wishes to prevent from shifting his responsibility on to causes beyond his control.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "chooser" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.