Choose vs. Chose: What’s the Difference?
Choose and chose are the present and past tense forms of the same verb, but they are frequently confused in writing. The confusion is understandable: the spelling difference is subtle and the pronunciation follows a pattern that isn’t obvious from the spelling.
The difference
Choose (rhymes with lose, pronounced /tʃuːz/) is the present tense: it describes choices being made now or habitually.
Chose (rhymes with nose, pronounced /tʃoʊz/) is the simple past tense: it describes a choice made at a specific point in the past.
Every morning I choose the fastest route. (present, habitual)
Yesterday I chose the longer route to avoid construction. (past, completed)
The third form — the past participle — is chosen: She has chosen a different approach.
The complete paradigm
| Form | Word | Example |
| Infinitive | choose | to choose carefully |
| Present | choose / chooses | I choose; she chooses |
| Simple past | chose | They chose the second option |
| Past participle | chosen | He has chosen correctly |
| Present participle | choosing | We are choosing between options |
Choose follows the same irregular pattern as freeze/froze/frozen, lose/lost (though lose is entirely irregular), and prove/proved/proven. The vowel shift from the long oo of the present to the long oh of the past is characteristic of a class of Old English strong verbs.
Common errors
Using chose as a present tense: I always chose the same option when describing a current habit should be I always choose the same option.
Using choose as a past tense: She choose the second candidate last week should be She chose the second candidate last week.
Confusion with chosen: She has chose the candidate should be She has chosen the candidate — the past participle, not the simple past, follows has/have.
A quick check
Ask: is the action happening now or generally? → choose. Did the action happen at a specific past moment? → chose. Is it preceded by has, have, or had? → chosen.
Trinka’s grammar checker identifies incorrect verb forms including common irregular verb errors like choose/chose/chosen.
References
Merriam-Webster. (2023). Choose. https://www.merriam–webster.com/dictionary/choose