1. A room in a house, especially a bedroom. 2. A room where a person of authority, rank, or importance receives visitors. 3.chambers A room in which a judge may consult privately with attorneys or hear cases not taken into court. 4.chambersChiefly British A suite of rooms, especially one used by lawyers. 5. A hall for the meetings of a legislative or other assembly. 6. A legislative or judicial body. 7. A board or council. 8. A place where municipal or state funds are received and held; a treasury. 9a. An enclosed space or compartment: the chamber of a pump; a compression chamber.b. An enclosed space in the body of an organism; a cavity: the four chambers of the heart.10a. A compartment in a firearm, as in the breech of a rifle or the cylinder of a revolver, that holds the cartridge in readiness for firing. b. An enclosed space in the bore of a gun that holds the charge.
TRANSITIVE VERB:
Inflected forms: cham·bered, cham·ber·ing, cham·bers 1. To put in or as if in a chamber; enclose or confine. 2. To furnish with a chamber. 3. To design or manufacture (a firearm) to hold a specific type of cartridge.
ETYMOLOGY:
Middle English chaumbre, from Old French chambre, from Late Latin camera, chamber, from Latin, vault, from Greek kamar.