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Chambers
[ cheym-berz ]
noun
- Robert, 1802–71, Scottish publisher and editor.
- Robert William, 1865–1933, U.S. novelist and illustrator.
- Whittaker Jay David Chambers, 1901–61, U.S. journalist, Communist spy, and accuser of Alger Hiss.
chambers
/ ˈtʃeɪmbəz /
plural noun
- a judge's room for hearing cases not taken in open court
- (in England) the set of rooms occupied by barristers where clients are interviewed (in London, mostly in the Inns of Court)
- archaic.a suite of rooms; apartments
- (in the US) the private office of a judge
- in chamberslaw
- in the privacy of a judge's chambers
- in a court not open to the public Former name for sense 5in camera
Example Sentences
And, in January 2017, hospital bosses called the consultants to a meeting where chief executive Tony Chambers told them to apologise to Letby and her family.
“Turkey’s attacks on energy infrastructure have had a devastating impact on civilians,” said Aarif Abraham, a barrister at Doughty Street Chambers, adding: “This could constitute a severe violation of international law.”
Jack Chambers, a junior minister in the Irish government, signed on behalf of the Republic of Ireland.
First minister John Swinney was among the dignitaries to lay a wreath at the Stone of Remembrance outside Edinburgh City Chambers during a ceremony on Sunday.
Judge Michael Chambers KC accepted a recommendation that Kaur should be given an indefinite hospital order to protect the public from serious harm.
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