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Correspondent Common

Correspondent has 5 different meanings across 2 categories:

Noun · Adjective

Definitions
Noun
1

someone who communicates by means of letters

"The old man kept a journal of his travels, writing to each correspondent as he reached new cities."

2

a journalist employed to provide news stories for newspapers or broadcast media

"The war correspondent filed a heartbreaking dispatch from the front lines that appeared in every major newspaper the next morning."

3

Someone who or something which corresponds.

"The two maps did not correspond, as their borders were drawn in completely different locations."

In plain English: A correspondent is someone who reports news from another place for a newspaper, magazine, or website.

"The foreign correspondent filed her report from Paris every evening at six o'clock."

Adjective
1

similar or equivalent in some respects though otherwise dissimilar

"brains and computers are often considered analogous"

"salmon roe is marketed as analogous to caviar"

2

Corresponding; suitable; adapted; congruous.

"The color scheme was perfectly correspondent to the vintage style of the furniture."

In plain English: Corresponding means matching up with something else so they fit together perfectly.

"The correspondent survey showed that most people were happy with their jobs."

Usage: Use the adjective form to describe items that match well together, such as colors in design or parts of a machine fitting perfectly. Avoid confusing this with "correspondent" as a noun, which refers specifically to a journalist reporting from abroad.

Example Sentences
"The correspondent survey showed that most people were happy with their jobs." adj
"The corresponding page in the manual was missing all the diagrams." adj
"This correspondent detail matches perfectly with the original blueprint." adj
"We need to find a correspondent solution that fits every requirement." adj
"The foreign correspondent filed her report from Paris every evening at six o'clock." noun
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
communicator journalist
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
pen pal foreign correspondent war correspondent

Origin

The word comes from the Medieval Latin correspondēre, meaning to stand together with someone. It entered English through Middle French before settling into its current form.

Rhyming Words
ent bent ment went sent vent pent hent cent fent dent tent kent gent rent lent djent ament seent brent
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