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barrister
[ bar-uh-ster ]
noun
- (in England) a lawyer who is a member of one of the Inns of Court and who has the privilege of pleading in the higher courts. Compare solicitor ( def 4 ).
- Informal. any lawyer.
Other Words From
- bar·ris·te·ri·al [bar-, uh, -, steer, -ee-, uh, l], adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of barrister1
Word History and Origins
Origin of barrister1
Example Sentences
Alamuddin was invited to become a barrister, an elite group of British lawyers, in 2010.
The dean told him face to face that Africans lacked the innate skills necessary to become a barrister.
It tells the story a British barrister, a criminal lawyer, in mid-life crisis.
Cherie Blair is a leading international barrister specializing in human-rights law.
The founder, Motilal Nehru, an Anglophile barrister, was a liberal member of the Indian nationalist movement.
From the dinner they proceeded to another place or two; and on getting home, towards one in the morning, there was the barrister.
"I never had a letter in my life but I turned it over to make sure," observed the more careful barrister.
Here—stop and look—is the epitaph of one, a considerable fellow in his day, a barrister of the Middle Temple.
He sent the barrister into the drawing room, went upstairs for Anne, and brought her in on his arm.
To the barrister's surprise, a well-dressed and really rather gentlemanly man entered.
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