How to Use choice in a Sentence

choice

1 of 2 noun
  • You made a good choice.
  • There is a wide range of choices.
  • She was faced with a difficult choice.
  • Given the choice, I'd rather stay home tonight.
  • He has some important choices to make.
  • Other choices on the menu looked equally tempting.
  • You can either accept the job or not. It's your choice.
  • I read about the various options so that I could make an informed choice.
  • A flexible health insurance plan gives patients more choice about doctors and coverage.
  • Both feel like the right choice.
    Avery Newmark, AJC.com, 6 Apr. 2026
  • The choice is still ours to make.
    Cornelia C. Walther, Forbes.com, 12 Sep. 2025
  • This has not been an easy choice.
    The Know, Denver Post, 7 May 2026
  • The wrong choice can cut it short.
    Anna Forsythe, Forbes.com, 18 Sep. 2025
  • And for many, that was the right choice to make.
    Ashley Vega, PEOPLE, 4 Sep. 2025
  • First choice is best with men over 25.
    Anthony D'alessandro, Deadline, 14 May 2026
  • How much choice did Boutros have with that gig?
    The Editorial Board, Chicago Tribune, 11 June 2026
  • Pearl is a guilty drunk and her drink of choice, too, is gin.
    Literary Hub, 10 Feb. 2026
  • Men and women are tops in first choice.
    Anthony D'alessandro, Deadline, 4 June 2026
  • Each burger comes with a choice of side.
    Gege Reed, Louisville Courier Journal, 18 Sep. 2025
  • But the umps have little choice but to adapt.
    Ken Rosenthal, New York Times, 8 Apr. 2026
  • Make no mistake, this is a war of choice.
    Letters To The Editor, The Orlando Sentinel, 3 Mar. 2026
  • Neither of them has much choice but to start over.
    Chase Rogers, Dallas Morning News, 3 Feb. 2026
  • That choice may have been strategic.
    Reginald David, Hartford Courant, 7 Apr. 2026
  • Adding more choices could turn that around.
    Mark Batinick, Chicago Tribune, 10 Mar. 2026
  • Is stainless steel a good choice for around the sink?
    Brandee Gruener, Southern Living, 4 Sep. 2025
  • Now there's a new choice for long-term birth control.
    Merrill Fabry, Time, 9 Oct. 2025
  • And no matter what, guests get their choice of two sides.
    Ella Gonzales, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 23 Mar. 2026
  • But that would be just one first-round choice for the Chiefs.
    Pete Grathoff, Kansas City Star, 23 Apr. 2026
  • The deal includes a choice of fries or coleslaw and a soft drink.
    Brock Keeling, Oc Register, 3 Mar. 2026
  • Arkin had no choice but to attend a few of those over the years.
    Mark Olsen, Los Angeles Times, 30 June 2023

choice

2 of 2 adjective
  • Choice beef is not as expensive as prime beef.
  • The key design focus of the game is choice.
    Rob Wieland, Forbes.com, 18 Aug. 2025
  • Her story about not wanting to flash her nips at the then–Prince of Wales is choice.
    Bethy Squires, Vulture, 21 Nov. 2025
  • Some of the movie’s choicest moments come from scenes in and around the Oval Office.
    David Rooney, HollywoodReporter, 1 June 2026
  • Some praised it as a feminist film, and others criticized it as anti-choice.
    Evan Nicole Brown, The Hollywood Reporter, 15 July 2022
  • Verastigui had worked for the anti-choice group Students for Life.
    Melissa Gira Grant, The New Republic, 16 Feb. 2021
  • But the choicest cover of GJWW 7?
    Chris Willman, Variety, 27 Jan. 2026
  • What ended up happening was that the pro-choice basically ignored the suit.
    Alexandra Zayas, ProPublica, 5 May 2022
  • But the biggest and brightest ones taunted us from the top of the tree, where the sun always shone and birds pecked at the choicest specimens.
    Grace Hwang Lynch, SFChronicle.com, 31 Oct. 2019
  • Now, anti-choice crusaders across the nation and in the halls of our government are poised to overturn the decision.
    Chelsey Sanchez, Harper's BAZAAR, 21 Jan. 2022
  • The influx of money has tripled the price of choice rural plots in recent years, putting them beyond the financial reach of locals.
    New York Times, 5 May 2022
  • Shoes off, sake poured, Mandy asks for the choicest cuts of Japanese beef, and the waiter fires up the charcoal.
    Adam H. Graham, Condé Nast Traveler, 16 Nov. 2019
  • Perhaps the uproar wouldn’t have been as loud 14 years ago, but the pro-choice movement still existed then (and has for decades prior).
    Erica Gonzales, ELLE, 3 Oct. 2022
  • The point is to disrupt the status quo—and that’s exactly what the pro-choice activists outside Kavanaugh’s house are doing.
    Emma Specter, Vogue, 9 May 2022
  • That means Paulson gets much of the choicest dialogue and the most colorful invective.
    David Rooney, HollywoodReporter, 10 Nov. 2025
  • In each chapter, Prose curates her curation, telling us not only which books and authors to look at, but where in each of them to look for the choicest, most telling views.
    Meredith Maran, The Christian Science Monitor, 5 July 2018
  • That’s your choice to prioritize more dependable success over bragging rights for coaxing a half dead super-choice plant through the vagaries of a yo-yo bit of winter.
    Paul Cappiello, Louisville Courier Journal, 16 Jan. 2026
  • Recent retail developments on Manhattan’s choicest shopping streets, however, are painting a different picture.
    Eric Twardzik, Robb Report, 6 Sep. 2025
  • One of the world’s largest exhibitions of olden literature is gathering more than a hundred booksellers from across the globe to share their choicest wares — rare tomes, illustrations, maps, historical documents and random ephemera guaranteed to level-up your bookshelf and walls.
    John Metcalfe, Mercury News, 18 Feb. 2026
  • In a three-way race between first-time candidates, Julie Aldridge, a substitute teacher in Olathe who was endorsed by the pro-choice Greater Kansas City Women’s Political Caucus, defeated her main rival, Melissa Hershey, a registered nurse and paraprofessional who was endorsed by Kansans for Life.
    Eric Adler, Kansas City Star, 5 Nov. 2025

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'choice.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Last Updated: