WordNet
n. a lawyer who specializes in defending clients before a court of law [syn: trial lawyer]
Usage examples of "trial attorney".
At no time will you worry about the so-called package you will hand off to the trial attorney.
If you knew enough to even sit in court next to a trial attorney you would not be here.
You'll be up before a judicial panel of officers and enlisted men advised by trial attorney and myself from the JAG.
On Monday morning he happened to get on an elevator with the chief trial attorney and his assistant.
He was also as brilliant as he was hyperkinetic, a fine criminal trial attorney.
Nick Drake was a trial attorney, one of five who had started NERF many years before.
He fantasized a day when he could get out of the referral racket altogether, when he would be known and revered throughout Miami as a master trial attorney.
He was a former state attorney general and a nationally famous trial attorney who could pick and choose high-profile cases.
They thought of themselves as professionals, doing a job that required special skills and education, a job as vital and demanding as that of any trial attorney or teacher or social worker--more demanding, in fact--and jeans simply did not contribute to a professional image.
Of average height, he wasn't especially attractive, but he had a nice smile, got along well with both Sid and Kay, and just generally had a good reputation as a trial attorney.
Then, one day, a disenchanted California trial attorney with the unremarkable name of Thomas Mondel gave up a promising career to denounce the world's economic system with the contention that humans were made—.
Then, one day, a disenchanted California trial attorney with the unremarkable name of Thomas Mondel gave up a promising career to .