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Interrogando

Interrogando is a grammatical form used in several Romance languages, most commonly as the present participle (gerund) of the verb interrogar in Spanish and Portuguese and of interrogare in Italian. As a gerund, interrogando denotes ongoing action: someone is currently questioning or in the act of asking questions. In practice it appears in verb phrases such as está interrogando or sto interrogando, signaling that the questioning is in progress. It can also function adjectively to describe a situation involving ongoing questioning.

Etymology traces interrogando to the Latin interrogare, built from inter- “between” or “in relation to” and rogare

Usage and contexts: the noun form interrogatorio refers to a formal session of questioning, such as a

Related terms include the verb forms interrogar or interrogare, their various tenses, and nouns like interrogatorio.

“to
ask.”
The
sense
across
languages
centers
on
the
act
of
asking
questions
or
conducting
questioning,
often
in
formal
or
investigative
settings.
police
or
judicial
interrogation.
In
this
sense,
interrogando
describes
the
ongoing
action
of
carrying
out
such
questioning.
In
legal,
journalistic,
and
literary
contexts,
the
term
appears
as
part
of
descriptions
of
investigators,
witnesses,
or
suspects
undergoing
questioning,
or
as
a
general
reference
to
the
process
of
obtaining
information
through
questioning.
Depending
on
the
language,
there
are
corresponding
forms
for
the
person
being
questioned
(for
example,
the
phrases
referring
to
the
interrogado
or
the
interrogato)
and
for
the
one
who
questions
(interrogador
or
interrogante
in
some
usages).
The
exact
terms
vary
by
language,
but
the
core
idea
remains
the
same:
the
act
or
process
of
asking
questions.