answer implies the satisfying of a question, demand, call, or need.
had answers to all their questions
response may imply a quick or spontaneous reaction to a person or thing that serves as a stimulus.
a response to the call for recruits
reply often suggests a thorough response to all issues, points, or questions raised.
a point-by-point reply to the accusation
rejoinder can be a response to a reply or to an objection.
a salesman with a quick rejoinder to every argument
retort implies a reaction to an implicit or explicit charge, criticism, or attack which contains a countercharge or counterattack.
she made a cutting retort to her critics
Examples of retort in a Sentence
Verb (1)
when told she couldn't have it, she retorted, "Fine, I didn't want it anyway!" Noun (1)
she responded to the heckler with a scathing but hilarious retort that instantly won over the audience
the salesclerk responded to my query about the price with a brusque retort
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Verb
Defense lawyer Lonnie Randolph II retorted that paying a $150,000, or $15,000 cash bond, was setting the bar so high that no reasonable person could afford it — essentially keeping any poor person in jail.—Meredith Colias-Pete, Chicago Tribune, 30 July 2025 Farmer retorted that Pearson has not been around to do work this year.—Vivian Jones, The Tennessean, 2 July 2025
Noun
And as trade speculation has risen, Harris reported a sarcastic one-word retort from the pitcher.—Peter Chawaga, MSNBC Newsweek, 28 July 2025 The movie’s off-color humor wouldn’t fly today, but its rebellious spirit remains hilariously defiant — a refreshingly rude retort to the niceties of family films and their cringey feel-good messages.—Tim Grierson, Vulture, 25 July 2025 See All Example Sentences for retort
Word History
Etymology
Verb (1)
Latin retortus, past participle of retorquēre, literally, to twist back, hurl back, from re- + torquēre to twist — more at torture entry 1
Noun (2)
Middle French retorte, from Medieval Latin retorta, from Latin, feminine of retortus; from its shape
: a container in which substances are distilled or broken down by heat
Etymology
Verb
from Latin retortus, past participle of retorquēre, literally "to twist back, hurl back," from re- "back, again" and torquēre "to twist" — related to distort, extort, torture
Noun
from early French retorte "a vessel in which substances are distilled," derived from Latin retortus, past participle of retorquēre "to twist"; probably so called from its shape
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