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informant

noun

  1. person who provides privileged information about a person or organization to an agency
  2. one who supplies cultural or linguistic data in response to interrogation by an investigator
L322531 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ɪnˈfɔːmənt/ / /ɪnˈfɔɹmənt/

noun

Etymology: Etymology tree English inform Proto-Indo-European *-onts Latin -ns Latin -āns Old French -antbor. Proto-Indo-European *-onts Proto-Germanic *-ndz Proto-West Germanic *-andī Old English -ende Middle English -ant English -ant English informant From inform + -ant.

  1. One who relays confidential information to someone, especially to the police; an informer.

    One of her chief informants is Alicent’s handmaiden Talya (Alexis Rabin), whose inside info runs so deep that she’s the first to catch wind of Viserys’ death.

  2. A native speaker who acts as a linguistic reference for a language being studied. The informant demonstrates native pronunciation, provides grammaticality judgments regarding linguistic well-formedness, and may also explain cultural references and other important contextual information.

    The only material the linguist has to begin with are the informant's grammatical utterances in the target language pronounced arbitrarily in a natural or assigned communicative situation or stimulated artificially by the investigator.

    The informant learns his language by formal training and, more importantly, by constant exposure to its use. He cannot repeat to the linguist what he has never seen or heard.