[
US
/ˌɪntɝˈɫɑkjətɝ/
]
[ UK /ˌɪntəlˈəʊkjuːtɐ/ ]
[ UK /ˌɪntəlˈəʊkjuːtɐ/ ]
NOUN
- a person who takes part in a conversation
- the performer in the middle of a minstrel line who engages the others in talk
How To Use interlocutor In A Sentence
- In that case the Court of Appeal refused to grant an interlocutory injunction restraining breach of confidence or breach of copyright.
- Instead, the interlocutor is saying that the author was himself anti-Catholic, and therefore all of his writings are to be avoided. Owning Authors
- The remarks were addressed to her since she was present at the time and must have been recognised by the judge having appeared before him on earlier interlocutory applications.
- However, the biennial consideration of High Court Interlocutory fees produced an uprating of just under ten percent over two years.
- So much for greater cultural understanding when you're fumbling around with your Berlitz phrasebook while gesticulating wildly at your intended interlocutor.
- An application for assessment of damages is made on notice under the procedure for interlocutory applications under Ord 22, r 6.
- Instead, I will use the eristic technique of posing questions and “demanding” that my interlocutors answer them. Matthew Yglesias » Revenge of the Public Option
- Perhaps in reaction to the comments of their unseen interlocutors, their countenances are frozen in exasperation - one man leans forward, preparing to lunge in protest, while the other agitatedly wags his pencil.
- The statute constituting the Court of Appeal treats interlocutory appeals as being in a lower category than final appeals; the appeal may be heard by two Lords Justices instead of by three.
- But the difference between print's disorderliness and the Internet's, according to our interlocutors, has to do with the way it all gets filtered. Will Books Survive?