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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
/ ˈ³Ùʃ±ðɪ³¾²úÉ™³ú /
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
Hedingham & Chambers buses, that operates in a small part of Suffolk as well as Essex and is due to rebrand later this year, has also brought in new fares.
She said that most businesses, according to a survey by the British Chambers, are saying they want negotiation as opposed to retaliatory tariffs and she thinks would be the case in Northern Ireland as well.
The army filed a complaint against Paul Chambers, a lecturer at Naresuan University in central Thailand, under lese-majeste and computer crime laws, according to his legal representation.
The World Taiwanese Chambers of Commerce, which announced it was making the $510,000 donation to the foundation, is a global organization that connects Taiwanese business communities across the world.
Trump's recent willingness to turn down the heat, however, signals that Ford may be succeeding in grabbing the attention of the US, said Shakir Chambers, a Canadian Conservative strategist at the Toronto-based Oyster Group.
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