court of st. james
1Court of St James — Court Court (k[=o]rt), n. [OF. court, curt, cort, F. cour, LL. cortis, fr. L. cohors, cors, chors, gen. cohortis, cortis, chortis, an inclosure, court, thing inclosed, crowd, throng; co + a root akin to Gr. chorto s inclosure, feeding place, and… …
2Court of St. James — or Court of St. James s, the court of the British sovereign. It gets its name from St. James s Palace in London, where royal receptions were formerly held …
3Court of St. James — n. 〚after ST. JAMES S PALACE〛 the British royal court * * * …
4Court of St James — Court of St James, the one of the old names of the official home of the British king or queen. Formally, an ↑ambassador (=the official representative of a country) who is sent to the UK from a foreign country is called the Ambassador to the Court …
5Court of St. James — n. [after ST. JAMES S PALACE] the British royal court …
6Court of St. James's — United Kingdom This article is part of the series: Politics and government of the United Kingdom …
7Court of St. James's — the British royal court: so called from St. James s Palace, London, the former scene of royal receptions. Also, Court of Saint James. * * * Court of St. James or Court of St. James s, the court of the British sovereign. It gets its name from St.… …
8Court of St. James's — the British royal court: so called from St. James s Palace, London, the former scene of royal receptions. Also, Court of Saint James. * * * …
9Court of St James’s — the official name for the British royal court. Ambassadors in Britain are officially called ambassadors to the Court of St James’s. * * * …
10Court of St. James's — is the standard designation of the place to which ambassadors are posted in Great Britain. The absence of an apostrophe and a second s is common even in Britain but wrong, as here: He was ambassador to the Court of St. James in 1939, when… …