Sentence examples for interviewer from inspiring English sources

"interviewer" is a correct and usable word in written English.
It is a noun that is used to describe a person who conducts interviews, either for employment opportunities or for research purposes. For example, “The interviewer asked the applicant a series of questions about their qualifications.”.

Dictionary

interviewer

noun

One who interviews.

Exact(60)

This is remarkable because extended one-on-one interviews with an interviewer such as Jeremy Paxman are specifically what senior politicians have for the most part taken every opportunity to avoid.

One of Mr Richardson's more amusing campaign ads shows him at a job interview where the interviewer shrugs: "For what we're looking for, you might be a little over-qualified".Mr Richardson's foreign-policy experience is a plus, especially when compared with beginners such as Mr Edwards and Mr Obama.

On Sunday, the veteran interviewer Charlie Rose announced he had secured possibly the most sought-after interview of the year, when he revealed he would be airing a discussion with the president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, on his television show on Monday.

His interviewer duly bet him €50 at that price.

Even during the tense climax, he keeps things light, combining smiley walkout with stinging kicker: "It's getting a little Diane Sawyer in here," referencing the famously intrusive interviewer.

When Alternative Comedy Experience was launched, he defined its appeal by stating that "the comedians on this show do not wake up thinking, 'How can I develop something that will appeal to people in marketing?'" When it was cancelled, the consolation, he told one interviewer, was that "now there's some really good footage of great acts out there".

Even in the super soaraway Sun, he admitted to an interviewer from India Today, the daily parade of topless lovelies was "getting a bit old-fashioned.

The spectacle ended with Palin participating in a word-association game, asked to say the first thing that came to mind as her interviewer named what turned out to be three people.

It is handed down in absentia, and unless Earth has an extradition treaty with the 357-room celestial palace in which Tony Blair's idiosyncratic brand of faith presumably leads him to imagine he will spend eternity, then the former prime minister is safe to continue telling every second interviewer that "history will judge me", or that he is "prepared to be judged by history".

Paul walked back that statement on Monday, telling a Fox News interviewer "hyperbole can get the better of anyone", but the remark gave a glimpse into what critics insist is the senator's achilles heel: a susceptibility to the charge that he is a radical, fringe candidate cut from the same cloth as his father.

GP Midway through DC United's game against Montreal Impact, just after Eddie Johnson had once again narrowly missed being on the spot for a chipped through ball, DC coach Chad Ashton remarked to a sideline interviewer that when the striker's first DC goal came, that then "they'd start coming in bunches".

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