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Inner Temple

American  
[in-er tem-puhl] / ˈɪn ər ˈtɛm pəl /

noun

  1. Inns of Court1

  2. temple110


Inner Temple British  

noun

  1. (in England) one of the four legal societies in London that together form the Inns of Court

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Example Sentences

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The inner temple features images of the Roman gods Jupiter, Juno and Minerva on one wall, and silhouettes of the Egyptian deities Isis and Anubis on other walls, evidence of the religious “syncretism” - the blending of different belief systems - that was common in Roman public monuments but not in domestic ones of the period.

From Washington Times

The inner temple features images of the Roman gods Jupiter, Juno and Minerva on one wall, and silhouettes of the Egyptian deities Isis and Anubis on other walls, evidence of the religious “syncretism” — the blending of different belief systems — that was common in Roman public monuments but not in domestic ones of the period.

From Seattle Times

Zahler previously served as Williamson’s business affairs director and assisted with projects like the “Enchanted Love Workshop: Building the Inner Temple of the Sacred and the Romantic.”

From Slate

Working full-time as an education manager at London’s Inner Temple, she wrote most of Salt Slow in her lunch breaks and before and after work.

From The Guardian

After leaving Oxford, Cole returned to Sierra Leone before coming back to England to join the Inner Temple in London, prior to becoming the first black African to practise law in an English court, in 1883.

From BBC