interrogatory

noun
/ˌɪntəˈɹɑɡəˌtɔɹi/US/ˌɪntəˈɹɒɡətəɹi/UK

Etymology

From Late Latin; equivalent to interrogate + -ory (“pertaining to”), or more distantly inter- + rogatory.

Definitions

  1. A formal question or set of questions submitted to opposing party to answer, generally…

    A formal question or set of questions submitted to opposing party to answer, generally governed by court rule.

    • Sidney interposed with an interrogatory concerning the legality of the evidence
    • Kimberling, on the advice of his lawyer Frank Kameny, refused to answer several questions put to him on the 16-question interrogatory. After strong objections, the questions in question were withdrawn.
  2. A question

    A question; an interrogation.

    • But when he found that some of his interrogatories were evaded, and others answered undecisively, the look of gentleness which he had assumed, vanished, and his brow wore the cloud of disappointment and of anger.
  3. Serving to interrogate

    Serving to interrogate; questioning.

    • an interrogatory glance
    • The interrogatory stare of the cardinal is enough to bring a man to his knees.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for interrogatory. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA