letrado
lawyer
noun leh-TRAH-doh Rare
Origin: From Latin litteratus (learned, lettered), from littera (letter).
Also means
learned person
Usage Note
Letrado in legal contexts means a qualified lawyer or counsel, used in formal and judicial registers — closer to 'learned counsel' than the everyday abogado. Outside law it means a well-educated or lettered person. The feminine form is letrada. The colloquial opposite is iletrado (illiterate, unlettered).
Examples
"El letrado presentó sus argumentos ante el juez."
Natural Translation
The lawyer presented his arguments before the judge.
Related Words
Explore Spanish by topic
SpanishNow
6 min read