From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishRelated topics: Occupationscounsellorcoun‧sel‧lor British English, counselor American English /ˈkaʊnsələ $ -ər/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまる noun [countable]BOADVISEsomeone whose job is to help and support people with problemsAre you seeing a counsellor?student/marriage guidance/stress etc counsellorCOLLOCATIONSADJECTIVES/NOUN + counsellora student/family counsellor (=helping students or families with problems)Student counsellors say there's a lot of pressure at college these days.a debt/stress etc counsellor (=helping with debt, stress etc problems)A debt counsellor has been helping the family.a marriage (guidance) counsellor (=helping with marriage problems)You should talk to a marriage counsellor about your problem.a school counsellor (=working with the students at a school)I worked for three years as a school counsellor.a professional/trained counsellorSeek help from a professional counsellor if things go wrong.verbssee a counsellor (=go to a counsellor for help)Her doctor recommended that she should see a counsellor.Examples from the Corpuscounsellor• The hospice is appealing for more people to work as bereavementcounsellors.• Cathy Troupp was talking to a specialistcouplecounsellor about this month's casehistory.• He was undoubtedly an influentialcounsellor.• Maybe we should see a marriagecounsellor.• They had sought help from the marriage counsellor a little late in the day.• Throughout the discussion, the counsellor has severaltasks. 1 Giving everyone an opportunity to contribute.• The counsellorconstructs a working hypothesis which attempts to see meaning and connections in the counsellee's socialperformance.• The counsellor has responsibility for starting up the discussion.From Longman Business Dictionarycounsellorcoun‧sel‧lor /ˈkaʊnsələ-ər/ British English, counselor American English noun [countable]someone whose job is to help or advise people →commercial counsellor →debt counsellor