Interlocutor in a sentence as a noun

And surely, priests do not build churches with such money, as is claimed by the interlocutor.

You reply that it "is not necessary" which does not negate your interlocutor's point!

I can't speak for your original interlocutor, but for me, it went like this: Fish don't know about water ... Hang on.

You'll get a lot more out of a discussion if you don't argue with a caricature of your interlocutor's opinions.

If you want to have a good-faith debate, you should avoid tendentious re-writes of your interlocutor's arguments.

But if everything is reduced to 'what it's like', then my only possible response is to shut up - or to browbeat an interlocutor into doing so.

An "interlocutor of his preference" seems an excessive requirement.

We point out some of these erroneous assertions: Contrary to the interlocutors claim, the Church does not advocate the worship of images.

Your post is typical of the far left: do everything you can to appear smarter than your interlocutor, short of actually engaging the issue.

Postulate: very few people read anything but the first post and its reply, and upon doing so most upvoted all of your posts in the thread and downvoted all of your interlocutor's.

I met David at JuliaCon a couple weeks ago -- he's a physics professor at the National University of Mexico and a charming interlocutor.

The objective answer of why I think is BS is that an arrogant interlocutor, almost by definition, lacks empathyThis is an interesting formulation, and I think there is something to it.

A related problem in society is the assumption of ignorance; if someone expresses a passionate opinion and you demur, it seems more and more common for your interlocutor to assume you don't know some key fact in their worldview rather than solicit the basis of your disagreement.

"The combination of numerous dialects and a formal/informal continuum is pretty much unique to Arabic and gives rise to fascinating situations watching Arabs calibrate their language based on the situation and the linguistic background of their interlocutor.

The interlocutor would only have to go to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia on the internet, to see the list of eminent Catholic scientists and how the Church has supported scientific research since the emergence of the European universities in the Middle Ages.

Dennett: "The fact is that any program that could actually hold up its end in the conversation depicted would have to be an extraordinary supple, sophisticated, and multilayered system, brimming with “world knowledge” and meta-knowledge and meta-meta-knowledge about its own responses, the likely responses of its interlocutor, and much, much more….

To conclude, from my explanation of why people in Russia support Putin, that I must support Putin as well, strikes me as bearing the same relationship to the more ordinary jump to a desired conclusion, as an Olympic-class pole vault does to a bunny hop; further, if it's no longer possible for the average interlocutor to recognize the difference between explaining a position and supporting one, then I can only weep for the lost art of intellectual debate.

Interlocutor definitions

noun

the performer in the middle of a minstrel line who engages the others in talk

See also: middleman

noun

a person who takes part in a conversation