Dictionary
the barristers
noun
A lawyer with the right to speak and argue as an advocate in higher lawcourts.
Exact(59)
Him, his wife, the barristers, the judge.
It is the solicitors, say the barristers, who make the real money.
He's prepared to consider the barristers' concerns about quality of advocacy as a priority".
But more fun than the cases themselves were the barristers – the courtroom artistes, the wordsmith gladiators.
It also contains details of the current trial and the barristers involved.
That way you'll see the charges being read and the barristers making their opening statements.
Although, as the barristers and the judge discovered on Tuesday, a trial without a jury presents its own problems.
But none of the barristers – some in Sydney and some gathered in Melbourne – challenged the medical report outright.
As a child, she had watched Crown Court on television and seen the barristers at work in their fancy wigs.
A journalist said that he'd called one of the barristers, who had an Indian background, a 'curry muncher'.
Certainly, the "war lawyer" was no less impressive than some of the barristers I have witnessed in action.
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