Noun A majority of respondents said they disagreed with the mayor's plan.
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
The survey draws results on the interest of respondent FO’s towards philanthropic investments, next-generation and succession planning, and crypto investments. Francois Botha, Forbes, 2 May 2022 And here’s why: Simply owning a pair of trail running shoes might make a survey respondent identify as a trail runner. Marc Peruzzi, Outside Online, 13 Aug. 2021 The family’s race is determined by that of the family’s survey respondent. Alex Ford, NBC News, 24 Aug. 2022 For poll respondent Greg Wong, who commutes to Boston from Belmont for his job at a consulting company, driving is a separate issue from immigration policy. Samantha J. Gross, BostonGlobe.com, 26 July 2022 Goforth agreed to cooperate and testify in matters related to the mailer and Litafik, who was also named as a respondent in the ethics complaint. Joe Sonka, The Courier-Journal, 19 July 2022 The majority agreed the appeal of a respondent in 2018 Sauk County case, identified in court documents only as S.A.M., should not have been dismissed as moot. Bruce Vielmetti, Journal Sentinel, 28 June 2022 Tim Woody, another respondent, had a different view. Varun Shankar, Baltimore Sun, 24 June 2022 The City of Cape Town — which is listed as a respondent in the case — said last year that the 4 billion rand ($268 million) site would house Amazon's African headquarters. Anna Cooban, CNN, 21 Mar. 2022
Adjective
The salient findings of the report include, among others, the response of respondent family offices to the rising global inflation, high levels of cash holdings, and the much healthier performance of general portfolios as compared to past years. Francois Botha, Forbes, 2 May 2022 That percentage is roughly 15 percent higher than within the entire respondent pool. Paul Grein, Billboard, 8 Mar. 2022 Key respondent groups identified as Black – African (18%), Black – Caribbean (12%), Any Other Ethnicity (11%), Black Caribbean and White (10%), Indian (10%) and Asian and White (8%), among others. Manori Ravindran, Variety, 23 Aug. 2021 When a household agrees to participate, Nielsen has field representatives to contact would-be respondent homes. Brad Adgate, Forbes, 20 Apr. 2021 Absent a robust and respondent welfare state, protests have become a routine — and occasionally effective — means of social negotiation between citizens, workers and public officials. Chantal Berman, Washington Post, 19 Jan. 2018 See More
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Latin respondent-, respondens, present participle of respondēre