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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
In 1979, Andrew’s Alternative Miss World contest fought off legal action from another event with the help of a budding young defense barrister – future British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
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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