Do you mean, can you ask us questions? Yes.
If this relates to legal matters, the answer is still yes. However we have the same constitutional rights as anyone else in this regard.
When u are a witness u are free to leave when u want, but if u are a suspect they can hold u for up to 24hrs
"Answer" or "Reply" Interrogate, you ask questions. The antonym would be to respond.
Do you mean, can you ask us questions? Yes. If this relates to legal matters, the answer is still yes. However we have the same constitutional rights as anyone else in this regard.
The detective was ordered to interrogate the suspect.
Interrogate is a verb, not a noun, so it doesn't have a plural.
The detective will interrogate the suspect as part of his desire to learn the truth.
The officer attempted to interrogate the suspect on his actions.
I'd prefer to have your double interrogate me further.
The detective began to interrogate the suspect in order to gather more information about the crime.
The mysterious men interrogate the young man in cafe.
In a courtroom, to interrogate means to ask questions of a witness or defendant in a formal and structured manner, usually aimed at gathering information, testing credibility, or revealing the truth about a case. It is done by the lawyer representing one side to clarify facts, challenge the other party's evidence, or establish a legal argument.
Two detectives helped the young, inexperienced officer to interrogate the suspect.