chambers

Etymology


From.

Noun

 * 1)  A set of rooms in a building used as an office or a residential apartment.
 * 2) Chiefly in in chambers: a judge's private office which is used for hearings that do not need to be held in open court.
 * 3)  Originally, a set of rooms at an Inn of Court used by one or more barristers as an office and residence; now, the office of one or more barristers in any building.
 * 4) ; also,.
 * 5)  In full king's chambers: parts of the sea next to the coast of England and Wales delimited by imaginary lines connecting headlands, over which the Crown asserted exclusive jurisdiction; these have now been superseded by the concept of the territorial sea.
 * 1) Chiefly in in chambers: a judge's private office which is used for hearings that do not need to be held in open court.
 * 2)  Originally, a set of rooms at an Inn of Court used by one or more barristers as an office and residence; now, the office of one or more barristers in any building.
 * 3) ; also,.
 * 4)  In full king's chambers: parts of the sea next to the coast of England and Wales delimited by imaginary lines connecting headlands, over which the Crown asserted exclusive jurisdiction; these have now been superseded by the concept of the territorial sea.
 * 1) ; also,.
 * 2)  In full king's chambers: parts of the sea next to the coast of England and Wales delimited by imaginary lines connecting headlands, over which the Crown asserted exclusive jurisdiction; these have now been superseded by the concept of the territorial sea.
 * 1) ; also,.
 * 2)  In full king's chambers: parts of the sea next to the coast of England and Wales delimited by imaginary lines connecting headlands, over which the Crown asserted exclusive jurisdiction; these have now been superseded by the concept of the territorial sea.
 * 1) ; also,.
 * 2)  In full king's chambers: parts of the sea next to the coast of England and Wales delimited by imaginary lines connecting headlands, over which the Crown asserted exclusive jurisdiction; these have now been superseded by the concept of the territorial sea.
 * 1)  In full king's chambers: parts of the sea next to the coast of England and Wales delimited by imaginary lines connecting headlands, over which the Crown asserted exclusive jurisdiction; these have now been superseded by the concept of the territorial sea.
 * 1)  In full king's chambers: parts of the sea next to the coast of England and Wales delimited by imaginary lines connecting headlands, over which the Crown asserted exclusive jurisdiction; these have now been superseded by the concept of the territorial sea.

Translations

 * Finnish:
 * Ukrainian: поко́ї


 * Finnish: tuomarin toimisto


 * Finnish: asianajajan toimisto


 * Finnish: kruunun toimivaltainen merialue