That is one spelling of the noun counsellor (attorney, jurist, or adviser). The common US spelling is counselor, and is used interchangably with the variant counsel (as in "legal counsel").
No, neither form (councillor, counselor) is an adjective. It is a noun (a person).
No, councillor (US spelling, councilor) is a common noun, a word for any councillor of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Councillor Pauline Gibson, Labour or Councillor Robert Gorrie, Liberal DemocratCity Councilor Mike Ross, Boston City CouncilCouncillor Island, Tasmania, AustraliaCouncillor Lane, Cheadle, Manchester, UK or Councilor Lane, North Fort Myers, FL"Councillor Krespel", a novel by E.T.A. Hoffman
If you are trying to spell musician that is how you spell it.
You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.You spell it orbiting.
You spell it suffocate.
The correct way to spell "councillor" is with two L's.
counselor
It is a Councillor.
A homophone for "councillor" is "counselor."
The forms of the word are:counsel - (verb, noun) to advise, or a legal representative, e.g. counselor, attorneycouncil - (noun) a governing or advisory groupA similar word is console, meaning to commiserate, or a desk or platform.
muncipal councillor is local government officer.
No, neither form (councillor, counselor) is an adjective. It is a noun (a person).
The Dream of Councillor Popov was created in 1878.
Martin Hill - councillor - was born in 1954.
Ian Malcolm - councillor - was born in 1950.
A council member
There is no such thing as an Ontario councillor. There are MPP's who are members of Provincial Parliament and city councillors who members of city hall council.