[
US
/ˈkaʊnsəɫɝ, ˈkaʊnsɫɝ/
]
[ UK /kˈaʊnsɛlɐ/ ]
[ UK /kˈaʊnsɛlɐ/ ]
NOUN
- someone who has supervisory duties at a summer camp
- a lawyer who pleads cases in court
- someone who gives advice about problems
How To Use counsellor In A Sentence
- GPs and counsellors would need to be involved. Times, Sunday Times
- So we've actually put in place a helpline, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for people to call, where they'll get professional assistance from people who are trained counsellors.
- In fact in the recent case before the High Court, the counsellor failed to come up with a clear finding.
- The common thread in both situations is the communication of information in confidence to an adviser or therapeutic counsellor.
- Don't try to be a counsellor or adviser within the family. The Sun
- First to appear is one of the counsellors who answers the phone when prospective patients initially call. Times, Sunday Times
- The same doctor has to be a combination of priest, demiurge, counsellor, pharmacologist, horologist, talkshow host and healer.
- Share your feelings with a bereavement counsellor. The Sun
- 'Your nation have well been called perfidious, Major Counsellor. A Modern Mercenary
- She is bound to the rules and the choir, but not to the private recitation of the Divine Office; she can take part in chapters, except in those in which others are admitted to vows; she cannot be elected superior, mother-vicaress, mistress of novices, assistant, counsellor, or treasurer. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip