Get to know Chambers better with 10+ real example sentences, the meaning and synonyms like architect or designer.
Chambers in a sentence
Related words
Chambers meaning
- A set of rooms in a building used as an office or a residential apartment.
- Chiefly in in chambers: a judge's private office which is used for hearings that do not need to be held in open court.
- 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.
Using Chambers
- The main meaning on this page is: A set of rooms in a building used as an office or a residential apartment. | Chiefly in in chambers: a judge's private office which is used for hearings that do not need to be held in open court. | 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.
- Useful related words include: william chambers, sir william chambers, architect, designer.
- In the example corpus, chambers often appears in combinations such as: chambers of, both chambers, council chambers.
Context around Chambers
- Average sentence length in these examples: 29.6 words
- Position in the sentence: 9 start, 9 middle, 2 end
- Sentence types: 20 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Chambers
- In this selection, "chambers" usually appears near the start of the sentence. The average example has 29.6 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, nursery, young, dory, county, built and adding stand out and add context to how "chambers" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include 12 14 chambers in six and 1960 paul chambers became the. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "chambers" sits close to words such as introducing, thirds and bryan, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with chambers
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
They have nursery chambers for their young, chambers for night, and chambers for the winter. (15 words)
Vented barrel surrounded by metal mesh packing in the expansion chambers, followed by conical baffles in the forward chambers. (19 words)
Chambers, Robert (1864) '' Chambers Book of Days Further discoveries paralleled the improvements in the size and quality of the telescope. (20 words)
However, because Leuconia has more than 2 million flagellated chambers whose combined diameter is much greater than that of the canals, water flow through chambers slows to 3.6 cm per hour, making it easy for choanocytes to capture food. (40 words)
Illingworth was flown from Bundaberg to hospital in Brisbane, where she learned she had a complete intermittent heart block — an issue when electrical impulses in the heart’s upper chambers do not travel to the lower chambers. (37 words)
The only person in Scott County named Lafayette when the 1870 census was taken was a baby boy named Lafayette Chambers, who appears to have been the child of Riley Chambers and his second wife, Polly Anderson. (37 words)
Example sentences (20)
They have nursery chambers for their young, chambers for night, and chambers for the winter.
They are among the earliest megalithic of chambers built in Ireland; information from carbon dated red deer antlers show that the chambers were used between 5,800 and 5,000 years ago.
Born on June 24, 1943, Fay was the daughter of the late Maynard Dory Chambers and the late Gracie May Green Chambers.
Cleeve had started brightly forcing Adam Seedhouse Evans into early saves from Karnell Chambers and Toby Holland and Cleeve had the ball in the net but Chambers was flagged offside after converting Linden Dovey’s cross.
Illingworth was flown from Bundaberg to hospital in Brisbane, where she learned she had a complete intermittent heart block — an issue when electrical impulses in the heart’s upper chambers do not travel to the lower chambers.
The only person in Scott County named Lafayette when the 1870 census was taken was a baby boy named Lafayette Chambers, who appears to have been the child of Riley Chambers and his second wife, Polly Anderson.
The task force made up of members of the commission, Chambers County 911 & EMA, Chambers County Sheriff’s Office and other county staff will meet regularly throughout the year to discuss the county’s safety action plan.
If even one of these chambers (there are 12 -14 chambers in six or seven states) says no, the Electoral College votes do not go to Biden.
Senator Ahmad Lawan who was one of those outside the chambers on realizing the reality of what had faced him ran back to the Senate chambers.
As Jagdeo rose to address the chambers, all Government members, save for Communities Minister Ronald Bulkan and Indigenous People’s Affairs Minister Sydney Allicock, walked out of the chambers.
Senator Ike Ikweremadu bemoaned the use of women as sergeant at arm to manning the chambers, adding that he was looking forward that opportunity where energetic boys would be assigned to take charge of the chambers gates.
An important effect of this different organizational structure is that there is no conflict of interest where barristers in the same chambers work for opposing sides in a case, and in some specialised chambers this is commonplace.
A year after Robert's death, his brother William published a biography under the title Memoir of Robert Chambers; With Autobiographical Reminisces of William Chambers.
By rapidly vibrating these membranes, a cicada combines the clicks into apparently continuous notes, and enlarged chambers derived from the tracheae serve as resonance chambers with which it amplifies the sound.
Chambers, Robert (1864) '' Chambers Book of Days Further discoveries paralleled the improvements in the size and quality of the telescope.
Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary, W. & R. Chambers (1954) p.1355 See also portal * Altar call – invitation to become a Christian; given at a church service or event.
However, because Leuconia has more than 2 million flagellated chambers whose combined diameter is much greater than that of the canals, water flow through chambers slows to 3.6 cm per hour, making it easy for choanocytes to capture food.
In 1960, Paul Chambers became the first chairman appointed from outside the company. citation Chambers employed the consultancy firm McKinsey to help with reorganising the company.
In the adult fish, the four chambers are not arranged in a straight row but, instead form an S-shape with the latter two chambers lying above the former two.
Vented barrel surrounded by metal mesh packing in the expansion chambers, followed by conical baffles in the forward chambers.
Common combinations with chambers
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- chambers of 32×
- both chambers 27×
- council chambers 18×
- the chambers 14×
- chambers and 12×
- chambers in 9×
- chambers on 7×
- of chambers 6×
- chambers was 6×
- two chambers 6×