What are the personality traits of Solicitors?
Anyone know or work with solicitors? In general, what are their personality traits? Are they cold and heartless - or emotional and accommodating? What other characteristics do they have?
Answers:
Anally retentive, with disturbing obsession with regards to semantics. Often found to be drunk or under the influence of drugs of an evening, or shaking with caffeine overdose and slumped over a computer/in a police station at 2am in the morning.
HATE HATE HATE to be proved wrong by ANYONE, and a flat refusal to back down unitl the last second.
We do genuinely like the vast majority of our client's though, regardless of what they have done
What personalities?
They like walking in the evenings, swinging their handbags.
Dumb as a box of rocks.
Greed and Boredom.
I would answer this question but it will cost you £98.50
Please reply to Couldn't, Care and Less Solicitors
Newport
they are normal people like you and me, yes they do get involved ,but try not to show their emotions,
Very untrustworthy people,they like fleecing people as well !
Having worked for several years with solicitors in a organisation where they were 'civil servants'. ie not on a commission or points system. We dealt solely with children who were offending or were being offended against. In court, the were professional and detached. That didn't mean that in the office, reading files, charges, reports etc. they didn't get angry, frustrated or upset. I don't think it's possible to categorise the personality traits of a particular profession. I've known some very cold and uncaring doctors and also some gas fitters who got upset about families being left without cooking and heating facilities.
Based on the firm , that I had dealing with
Liers , dishonest scum bags , and that is being nice
Before anyone dissagrees with me
How can a Solicitor , act for a person that pretends to be a landlord , and evict a person from there home
The answers post by the user, for information only, FreeLawAnswer.com does not guarantee the right.
Answer question:
More Law Questions and Answers:
