Andrew Chrismer, Chicago Tribune, 30 Apr. 2026 In other words, Visit KC is betting heavily on people choosing to come to Kansas City for everything happening around the matches — Fan Fest, watch parties and the broader atmosphere — not just the games themselves.

Often it's the case that there isn't such a thing as choosing "right" or "wrong," so much as choosing what feels best given your circumstances.

chose, chosen, chose, choosing to select from a number of possibilities; pick by preference. She chose Sunday for her departure. to prefer or decide (to do something). He chose to run for election. to want; desire. I choose moving to the city.

choose in American English (tʃuːz) (verb chose, chosen or obsolete chose, choosing) transitive verb

Define choosing. choosing synonyms, choosing pronunciation, choosing translation, English dictionary definition of choosing. opt; pick out; select: She will not choose him as a dinner partner again.

choose /tʃuːz/ vb (chooses, choosing, chose, chosen) to select (a person, thing, course of action, etc) from a number of alternatives (transitive; takes a clause as object or an infinitive) to consider it desirable or proper: I don't choose to keep such company (intransitive) to like; please: you may stand if you choose

In English, 'choosing' is the present participle of 'choose,' reflecting an ongoing action of decision-making. The roots of the word 'choose' come from Old English 'cyosan,' which means to select or pick out.