The ordinary conseillers d'etat (en service ordinaire) were elected by the Legislative Assembly, and consultation with the conseil d'etat was often insisted on by the constitution or by law.
The election of conseillers generaux was thrown open to universal suffrage, and the municipal councils were allowed to elect the maires and their colleagues.
The conseillers a brevet were all suppressed in 1673, and the peers of France ceased to be members of the council.
Each year, in each canton of France, these generally unwilling aids in the administration of justice are selected among the respectable citizens by a council composed of Maires, Juges de Paix, andConseillers generaux.
The court is divided into three Chambres, having each a President and sixConseillers Maitres who alone have a voice in the deliberations and constitute, themselves, the members of the administrative tribunal sitting in judgment.
The Presidents and Conseillers cannot be removed, and are placed on the retired list, the Presidents and Maitres at seventy-five years of age, and the Referendaires at seventy years.
They re-entered it later under the name ofconseillers clercs.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "conseillers" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.