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The verb of complaint is complain. As in "to complain to someone".
You get the same respond!!!
you can file a lawsuit against someone for practically anything.
When a person (the plaintiff) sues someone (the defendant), the defendant gets a certain amount of time to respond to the lawsuit (times vary by state). If the defendant does not respond to the lawsuit within the time period prescribed or does not show up to court on the day he or she is supposed to, the plaintiff will ask for (and the court will usually give) a default judgment. Simply put, the plaintiff wins because the defendant did not make an effort to defend themselves. A request for entry of default is when the time has passed for the defendant to respond to a lawsuit and the plaintiff is asking for a default judgment. This only applies to civil cases, not criminal cases.
Of course.
When someone is referred to as a party to a lawsuit it means they are a litigant, either plaintiff or defendant.
its self explanitory its a form upon which you lodge a formal complaint against someone or something
RESPOND: To answer or react to something. For example, When someone calls your name you RESPOND by looking to see who called you. Or you RESPOND verbally by saying "I am here!". When someone writes you a letter you RESPOND by sending a letter back to them.
Yes you can and you should file this complaint with the police department.
If there is lawsuit, or sue.
It mostly depends on the genre and what actually happens in the film
It can be either one, depending on your meaning. You would "respond to" a question or comment directed at you. You would "respond for" someone else who cannot respond for themselves.