Need another word that means the same as “questionnaire”? Find 9 synonyms and 30 related words for “questionnaire” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Questionnaire” are: question sheet, set of questions, survey form, form, test, exam, examination, quiz, opinion poll
Questionnaire as a Noun
Definitions of "Questionnaire" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “questionnaire” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A form containing a set of questions; submitted to people to gain statistical information.
- A set of printed or written questions with a choice of answers, devised for the purposes of a survey or statistical study.
Synonyms of "Questionnaire" as a noun (9 Words)
exam | A set of questions or exercises evaluating skill or knowledge. He was likely to fail his exams again. |
examination | The action or process of conducting an examination. He scraped through the examinations at the end of his first year. |
form | A set order of words a formula. They both had form. |
opinion poll | A vague idea in which some confidence is placed. |
question sheet | Uncertainty about the truth or factuality or existence of something. |
quiz | A test of knowledge, especially as a competition between individuals or teams as a form of entertainment. A pub quiz. |
set of questions | The act of putting something in position. |
survey form | The act of looking or seeing or observing. |
test | The act of undergoing testing. When the test was stolen the professor had to make a new set of questions. |
Associations of "Questionnaire" (30 Words)
albedo | The proportion of the incident light or radiation that is reflected by a surface, typically that of a planet or moon. The lunar maria have a lower albedo than the surrounding terrain. |
answer | Give the correct answer or solution to. Answer a question. |
answering | Replying. An answering glance. |
appellant | The party who appeals a decision of a lower court. |
checklist | A list of items (names or tasks etc.) to be checked or consulted. |
data | A collection of facts from which conclusions may be drawn. Statistical data. |
demographic | Relating to the structure of populations. The demographic trend is towards an older population. |
examination | The action or process of conducting an examination. An examination of marketing behaviour. |
inquire | Inquire about. Annie inquired after her parents. |
inquiry | A systematic investigation of a matter of public interest. New areas of inquiry emerged in the course of the conference. |
interrogative | Relating to verbs in the so called interrogative mood. A hard interrogative stare. |
interrogatory | Relating to the use of or having the nature of an interrogation. She abandoned her interrogatory monologue. |
labile | Easily broken down or displaced. An emotionally labile person. |
poll | Convert into a pollard. There were some beautiful willows and now the idiot Parson has polled them into wretched stumps. |
pollster | A person who conducts or analyses opinion polls. A pollster conducts public opinion polls. |
query | Ask a question about something, especially in order to express one’s doubts about it or to check its validity or accuracy. I rang the water company to query my bill. |
react | Show a response or a reaction to something. The hydrogen and the oxygen react. |
reactive | Showing a response to a stimulus. A proactive rather than a reactive approach. |
reconnaissance | The act of reconnoitring (especially to gain information about an enemy or potential enemy. Conducting client reconnaissance. |
reconnoiter | Explore, often with the goal of finding something or somebody. |
reexamine | Look at again; examine again. |
rejoinder | A defendant’s answer to the plaintiff’s reply or replication. It brought a sharp rejoinder from the teacher. |
reply | A statement either spoken or written that is made to reply to a question or request or criticism or accusation. He was gone before we could reply to his last remark. |
respond | Respond favorably or as hoped. To partner s opening one heart it is dangerous to respond two clubs. |
respondent | The codefendant especially in a divorce proceeding who is accused of adultery with the corespondent. The respondent defendant. |
responsive | Responding readily and with interest. A flexible service that is responsive to changing social patterns. |
review | Hold a review of troops. All areas of the company will come under review. |
riposte | A quick, clever reply to an insult or criticism. You ve got a strange sense of honour Grant riposted. |
statistic | A datum that can be represented numerically. The statistics show that the crime rate has increased. |
survey | Make a survey of for statistical purposes. I surveyed the options. |