Respondent vs Interviewed - What's the difference?
respondent | interviewed |
(legal) person who answers for the defendant in a case before a court. In some legal systems, when one appeals a criminal case, one names the original court as defendant, but the state is the respondent.
One who responds. See also correspondent.
Person that participates in research involving questionnaires.
Disposed or expected to respond; answering; according; corresponding.
* Francis Bacon
(interview)
(obsolete) An official face-to-face meeting of monarchs or other important figures.
*, II.2.4:
Any face-to-face meeting, especially of an official nature.
A conversation in person (or, by extension, over the telephone, Internet etc.) between a journalist and someone whose opinion or statements he or she wishes to record for publication, broadcast etc.
A formal meeting, in person, for the assessment of a candidate or applicant.
A police interrogation of a suspect or party in an investigation.
To ask questions of (somebody); to have an interview.
To be interviewed; to attend an interview.
* 2000 , U.S. News and World Report: Volume 129, Issues 18-25
As a noun respondent
is person who answers for the defendant in a case before a court. In some legal systems, when one appeals a criminal case, one names the original court as defendant, but the state is the respondent.As an adjective respondent
is disposed or expected to respond; answering; according; corresponding.As a verb interviewed is
past tense of interview.respondent
English
Noun
(en noun)Adjective
(en adjective)- Wealth respondent to payment and contributions.
interviewed
English
Verb
(head)interview
English
(wikipedia interview)Noun
(en noun)- To be present at an interview , as that famous of Henry the Eighth and Francis the First, so much renowned all over Europe […], no age ever saw the like.
- The reporter gave the witness an interview .
- It was a dreadful interview ; I have no hope of getting the job.
Derived terms
* exit interviewVerb
(en verb)- He interviewed the witness.
- The witness was interviewed .
- When she interviewed with Microsoft in August, she overlooked a small cut in salary and asked about long-term career opportunities — and quality of life.